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Disclosure (Scotland) Bill

Overview

This Bill aims to simplify the process for disclosing criminal history information about people.

It proposes changes to whether and how certain offences are disclosed. An example of this is offences committed when a person was under 18.

It also proposes new appeal processes for which convictions are disclosed.

It would also make changes to protection of vulnerable groups (PVG) checks.

The Bill would mean that anyone who wants to work with children, young people or vulnerable adults would have to be a member of the PVG scheme. It would be against the law for employers and individuals not to do this.

You can find out more in the Explanatory Notes document that explains the Bill.

Why the Bill was created

People and employers applying for disclosures and criminal record checks can find the processes complicated. This Bill aims to simplify these processes.

The Scottish Government wants to find the right balance between protecting the public and allowing people to move on from offending.

You can find out more in the Policy Memorandum document that explains the Bill.

Becomes an Act

The Disclosure (Scotland) Bill passed by a vote of 63 for, 0 against and 0 abstentions, The Bill became an Act on 14 July 2020.

Introduced

The Scottish Government sends the Bill and related documents to the Parliament.

Disclosure (Scotland) Bill as introduced

Related information from the Scottish Government on the Bill

Opinions on whether the Parliament has the power to make the law (Statements on Legislative Competence)

Information on the powers the Bill gives the Scottish Government and others (Delegated Powers Memorandum)

Scottish Parliament research on the Bill 

Financial Resolution

The Presiding Officer has decided under Rule 9.12 of Standing Orders that a financial resolution is required for this Bill.

Stage 1 - General principles

Committees examine the Bill. Then MSPs vote on whether it should continue to Stage 2.

Have your say

 The deadline for sharing your views on this Bill has passed. Read the views that were given.

Ministerial Statement

Before Stage 1 Maree Todd MSP, the Minister for Children and Young People, gave a statement on the Bill

Committees involved in this Bill

Who examined the Bill

Each Bill is examined by a 'lead committee'. This is the committee that has the subject of the Bill in its remit.

It looks at everything to do with the Bill.

Other committees may look at certain parts of the Bill if it covers subjects they deal with.

Who spoke to the lead committee about the Bill

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First meeting transcript

The Convener

Item 3 is the committee’s first evidence session on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. We will begin by hearing from the Scottish Government bill team, which includes officials from Disclosure Scotland. I welcome Kevin Lee, who is the bill manager at Disclosure Scotland; Gerard Hart, who is the director of protection services and policy at Disclosure Scotland; and Ailsa Heine, who is a senior principal legal officer in the Scottish Government’s legal directorate. I invite the panel to make some opening remarks.

Kevin Lee (Disclosure Scotland)

Good morning, convener and committee members. Thank you for the opportunity to make some opening remarks on the bill.

The bill builds on the reforms that have been achieved under the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019, both of which were recently passed by the Scottish Parliament.

The bill’s main purpose is to strengthen the barring service in order to maintain the Scottish Government’s ability to protect the most vulnerable people in society while delivering a range of positive and proportionate reforms to the disclosure regime. Since November 2016, when the Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills announced a review of Scotland’s disclosure regime, we have engaged extensively with stakeholders to achieve that balance.

Last summer, following preconsultation engagement with more than 300 individuals and organisations and an online survey that generated more than 800 responses, we undertook the statutory public consultation on disclosure. The consultation document was distributed widely to stakeholders, including all organisations that are registered with Disclosure Scotland. We received 353 responses from a broad cross-section of Scottish life, including individuals, charities, sports associations, advocacy groups and private sector businesses. The engagement with our stakeholders has helped to shape the bill that is before Parliament.

Part 1 of the bill creates the legislative framework for the state disclosure of criminal history and other information, reducing the number of disclosure products in order to streamline and simplify the process for applicants for disclosure.

The bill gives disclosure applicants greater control over the sharing of disclosure information by separating into two distinct stages the application and the individual’s request to make that information available to a third party. That is an important improvement on the current process that will allow individuals to apply for a review of disclosure information before it is seen by a third party.

For review applications, the bill establishes new procedures to have childhood conviction information, other relevant information and removable convictions taken off a person’s disclosure. It also sets out the role of the independent reviewer, who will make determinations on such review applications.

On childhood convictions, the bill provides that convictions for offences that were committed while the offender was under 18 will no longer automatically be disclosed. Instead, the Scottish Government will have to decide in each case whether to include such information. If it is included, the Government will need to give the applicant reasons why the information is relevant to the disclosure purpose and ought to be disclosed.

The Scottish Government recognises the important role that other relevant information—known as ORI—from the police plays in safeguarding, so it is vital that it continue to be available to protect the public. The main reform in the bill is the introduction of statutory guidance, which will be issued by Scottish ministers to the chief constable, who must have regard to it when exercising functions under that part of the bill. There will also be statutory review mechanisms to have ORI removed from a disclosure. In relation to removable convictions, the bill will end the current process of people having to apply to the sheriff and will replace it with an internal application to Disclosure Scotland, followed by a right to apply to the independent reviewer.

In summary, the bill provides for a two-step process in which decisions that are made by Disclosure Scotland in relation to childhood convictions or removable convictions or by the chief constable in relation to ORI may be subject to independent review, followed by a right of appeal to the sheriff on a point of law only. That will all take place before the disclosure is made available to a third party. We will ensure that the process is less burdensome for the applicant and that it provides a single streamlined outcome for the applicant.

The bill also provides that nobody who is under the age of 16 should have access to the state disclosure system. That mirrors arrangements in the rest of the United Kingdom. Provision is made for exceptions when it is considered to be appropriate in the circumstances to provide disclosure. However, there is an absolute prohibition on anyone under 16 joining the protecting vulnerable groups scheme.

I turn to part 2 and the changes that are being made to the protecting vulnerable groups scheme. The bill introduces a mandatory PVG scheme for people who work with vulnerable groups—something for which the Parliament’s Health and Sport Committee said there was a “compelling case” in its 2017 report, “Child Protection in Sport”.

The PVG scheme is currently a lifetime membership scheme. In its present form, it will simply continue to increase in size. The bill aims to address that by introducing renewable time-limited membership of five years. The bill will replace the concept of doing “regulated work” with a list of core activities that give rise to “regulated roles” that trigger PVG scheme membership—for paid and voluntary activities—with the intention of ensuring that the scheme focuses on those who hold “power or influence over” children and protected adults.

In responding to the well-documented episodes of exploitation and abuse in the international aid sector, the bill will also bring certain regulated roles that are outside Scotland into the scope of the PVG scheme. The bill also makes provision for Scottish ministers to have new powers to impose conditions and limitations on scheme members while they are under consideration for listing. Where those apply, they will ensure that vulnerable people are protected from individuals who pose a serious risk of harm.

Finally, local authorities will be able to make referrals to Disclosure Scotland within the context of their normal adult and child protection roles when there is no employer involved that can make a referral under the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007. That addresses the safeguarding gap that exists in the care environment, where, in particular, self-directed support has been much more widely used since 2007.

My colleagues and I are pleased to take any questions.

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

Can you give a bit more detail of the thinking behind the proposed move from lifetime membership to time-limited five-year membership of the PVG scheme?

Kevin Lee

The PVG scheme has now been in operation for eight years. In that time, we have seen it become inflated beyond the size that it was originally thought that it would be. There are more than 1.2 million people in the scheme right now, and our research tells us that as many as 20 per cent of them are no longer doing regulated work. As such, we have a situation in which Disclosure Scotland is monitoring those individuals daily with no safeguarding return. That is the thinking behind time-limited membership.

Iain Gray

Given that membership of the scheme is monitored all the time, if members are not using—or do not need—membership at a given moment, that creates a burden for Disclosure Scotland. Is that the key issue?

Kevin Lee

Yes, carrying out the monitoring comes at a cost. However, there is also intrusion into people’s lives when there is no need for it, because they are not doing regulated work.

Iain Gray

Would you say that, largely, it is an administrative measure to avoid the scheme ballooning out of control?

Kevin Lee

Yes.

Iain Gray

That is fair enough, but it has an impact on the members of the scheme because those who are using their PVG membership will have to renew it every five years. What are the likely consequences for them in respect of the cost and burden of reapplication?

Kevin Lee

In respect of having to do the checks every five years, we have seen that organisations have already introduced their own recurring checks. The Care Inspectorate recommends that it is good practice that organisations do a check every three years. We can see from our data that organisations, including voluntary organisations, are doing that.

Gerard Hart (Disclosure Scotland)

It is also worth saying that we have tried many different ways to get people to leave the PVG scheme voluntarily when they are not doing regulated work. We have tried writing out to tens of thousands of people, suggesting that, but the returns were very limited. It is also reputationally dangerous for the PVG scheme to get so large that it no longer bears any relation to the number of people who are doing regulated work in Scotland.

The forthcoming fees consultation and the work on how that will all be designed in co-production with the various employer groups and employees is an opportunity for us to think about different ways to add value to the scheme during that five-year tenure.

Iain Gray

I am sorry, but what do you mean by that?

Gerard Hart

We can think about different ways in which the scheme could be deployed. For example, one of the policy ideas is that, in return for a fee that is payable over five years, an individual might not have to pay again to use the scheme in those five years. If that were the case, it would benefit lots of workers out there who are locum workers or who have low-paid jobs and work on multiple sites, who have to pay again and again. The Government is very keen to have a conversation with stakeholders about how driving value into the new model of five-year membership could be achieved. There will be a consultation process and there is on-going dialogue with unions and other organisations and employers about how that could be done.

Iain Gray

I will track back to the daily monitoring. Is the suggestion that that will continue but that you will control the size of the membership?

Kevin Lee

Yes.

Iain Gray

You are not replacing daily monitoring.

Kevin Lee

No.

Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

Before I ask my question, I have a quick follow-up to Iain Gray’s question. Is it incumbent on the person who has the PVG to follow it up with their organisation? Do they have to pay again to do that? What is the process?

Kevin Lee

The bill allows a sort of buffer period: the bill says that before the end of the five years, Disclosure Scotland has to contact the individual scheme member and the organisations that are associated with their scheme membership to let them know that the membership is about to expire and to ask whether they still need to be in the scheme. After that, the renewals process can start.

Liz Smith

Is that at a cost to the individual?

Kevin Lee

As Gerard Hart suggested, there is a separate piece of work that we need to do in co-operation with unions and employers to understand how that model should work. At the moment, there are questions about how the current model works, because we can see that individuals who pay for the scheme themselves are having to pay £59, or £18 multiple times, because they move around and new organisations want access to their full disclosure. There is work to be done to understand whether we have the right model.

All that the bill does is provide for ministers to set the period at five years.

10:15  

Gerard Hart

There is also an important point of principle. Over the past few years, when we have done customer research, we have repeatedly found that many people do not understand that they are in a membership scheme. They think that they have a disclosure, which is the bit of paper that they have. Some of them do not understand that we are then monitoring them every single day, uploading millions of records to our systems and matching them against existing records to see whether anything has changed. We need to rebrand PVG and move it away from being a disclosure product to being a membership product. With a membership product, people expect to get value: they expect to have control over their information and to be able to use it in a productive way. In taking things forward, we are thinking about such design principles.

For a membership product to succeed, the burden to pay for it initially would normally rest with the member. However, members could have an arrangement with their employers to reimburse that, or another arrangement. Currently, the law says that somebody pays—it does not say who will pay; it is ambiguous about that. However, we think that that should probably change.

Liz Smith

I make the point because the most recent two times—some years ago—that we have had a discussion about PVG in the committee, the cost factor was important. There is an implication that, in some institutions—for example, schools—the cost falls on the school or local authority. If we ask for membership to be renewed every five years, as opposed to having lifetime membership, there are cost implications. It would be helpful if, at some stage, the bill team could analyse the likely costs of that.

Gerard Hart

Some analysis has been done—we have an understanding of what the impact might be. As Kevin Lee said, in some cases local authorities pay fees and in others they do not. There is not a homogeneous position across the country on who pays fees for PVG.

That said, it is clear that in any fees structure there are winners and losers. Some people would have one disclosure and never darken our door again for another disclosure. Under a five-year model, perhaps they would lose. However, because of the gig economy, people—including locum workers such as supply teachers, doctors and nurses—are increasingly changing their place of work and are using the scheme more and more often in a five-year period. On balance, those people will be winners. There will be swings and roundabouts with this model.

Liz Smith

Convener, it would be helpful if that information could be shared with the committee.

The Convener

If you could provide that information, we would be delighted.

Gerard Hart

Yes—I am happy to do that.

Liz Smith

It is important to put on record that the bill’s reception has been generally positive, although there are issues about the meaning of “relevant” information. In its evidence, the Law Society of Scotland says that

“Given the significant discretion being afforded to Disclosure Scotland to decide whether information in providing Level 1 or Level 2 disclosure is to be included depends on how the respective tests of ‘ought to be included’ and ‘relevant for the purposes of disclosure’ are to be interpreted.”

It also says that

“it is not clear from the Bill whether information must meet either or both of the ‘ought to be included’ and ‘relevant for the purposes of disclosure’ tests”.

Can you explain more about that? There is a genuine concern from the Law Society of Scotland about how that would be addressed.

Kevin Lee

In relation to level 2 disclosure, there are two limbs to the test. The first part is: is it relevant? The second part is about whether something “ought to be disclosed”. That is because, for access to level 2—the high-level information—there will always be a purpose for asking for access to that information. With level 1 disclosures, access can be for any purpose. The simple question is whether it meets the “ought to be disclosed” requirement.

We recognise that the Law Society of Scotland and other gatekeepers will have strong views on how the decisions will be made. We are committed to working in collaboration with stakeholders to develop a robust decision-making framework, so that their views are heard and so that what we deliver is in the best possible condition for stakeholders.

Gerard Hart

We have significant experience of making decisions about the meaning of people’s past criminal behaviour and police information in respect of whether they are suitable to do regulated work with children or protected adults. We and the predecessor team—the disqualified from working with children team—have been doing this for 15 years or more. There is a lot of experience of weighing things up and making decisions. We do that using a structured judgment protocol, and we intend to use that experience, skill and knowledge, as well as appropriate guidance and structured decision-making frameworks, to ensure that the process is fair, consistent and reliable.

Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)

I wonder whether you can clear up some confusion in my mind about the difference between the provisions in the bill and those in the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019, which are based on the date of convictions for under-18s. How do they fit together?

Ailsa Heine (Scottish Government)

In the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019, the rehabilitation period—or the disclosure period—is based on the date of conviction.

Rona Mackay

Yes.

Ailsa Heine

On the provisions in our bill, the policy is about the behaviour of under-18s; it is not about the date of conviction. Somebody might carry out behaviour when they are under 18, but, for some reason—it might simply be for admin reasons—they might not be prosecuted for a number of months. They might not even be prosecuted for a number of years, because of circumstances in the reporting of the offence. Given that the policy is to ensure that any behaviour of under-18s is not automatically disclosed, the bill has to focus on the date of the behaviour and not on the date of conviction.

Rona Mackay

I am still slightly confused. Which comes first when making a decision? Is it the date of the behaviour?

Ailsa Heine

In decisions about whether to disclose a conviction, we will look at the date of the behaviour.

Rona Mackay

Not the date of conviction.

Ailsa Heine

Not the date of conviction, which might be quite a few years later. If a 17-year-old commits an offence and they are convicted when they are 17, it does not seem appropriate to treat another 17-year-old, who just happens to be convicted after the date—

Rona Mackay

So a judgment is made on the behaviour.

Ailsa Heine

Yes.

Rona Mackay

Okay. Thank you.

Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green)

I am interested in the proposal to put a lower age limit on PVG scheme membership. I was 15 when I started to do what would be regulated work for my church—that was a few years before PVG scheme membership. Will you explain the rationale behind the change?

Gerard Hart

Certainly. Although we recognise that there are circumstances in which a disclosure may sometimes be appropriate for a person under the age of 16, the idea of PVG involves on-going longitudinal membership of the individual in the scheme. The policy thinking is that, in most circumstances, a child who has something in their background or their circumstances that would lead them to be under consideration for barring under the age of 16 or who was involved with the police in a significant way would already be managed under the getting it right for every child process. The police, social workers and other organisations would link up to provide the care and welfare of that person, as well as the management of any offending behaviour risk.

It was felt that it would not be proportionate to allow young people to come into the PVG scheme and have on-going monitoring overhead when considered against the risk of not allowing that to happen and relying instead on the very robust procedures that are in place for young people’s behaviour when they commit criminal or harmful behaviour. The latter approach allowed us to strike a balance that is consistent with the approach in the rest of the United Kingdom.

On balance, it would be inappropriate to have children under the age of 16 in the scheme, but there will be circumstances in which that is possible. For example, when a family is about to adopt, enhanced disclosures on adult household members are sometimes obtained.

In relation to work, the PVG was felt to be inappropriate for under-16s. Through the children’s hearings system and youth justice arrangements, we have very robust processes to provide for a more proportionate and fairer way to deal with those behaviours than putting them into PVG. That was the policy thinking behind that approach.

Ross Greer

How many people gained membership of the PVG scheme when they were under 16? I accept that many of them will have gained membership when they were 15, not long before that age.

Kevin Lee

Since 2015, around 300 under-16s a year have entered the PVG scheme. The bill will not stop under-16s performing regulated roles; it will disapply the offence provisions that exist in relation to the PVG scheme being mandatory for individuals and organisations. It will still be possible for the current arrangements to apply; the bill will simply stop the on-going monitoring of children.

Ross Greer

I understand that the number of under-16s who have been barred by ministers is very small—it is around half a dozen people. However, there are instances in which individuals have been barred. You have explained the systems that should be in place for monitoring those individuals. Many of those systems are delivered primarily through social work, which is delivered at local authority level. It would certainly not be the first time that a move between local authorities resulted in a break in someone being effectively monitored and effectively supported. Under the proposed change, how will the system ensure that someone who moves from one area to another continues to be monitored appropriately and that, if required, they would undergo a PVG check?

Gerard Hart

I was involved in the work on the disclosure provisions surrounding the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Bill, which has now been enacted. A substantial amount of dialogue has taken place on how to build a non-criminal construct to deal with young people under the age of 12 and how to manage their behaviour in a way that is right for victims, right for public protection and right for the young people concerned. There has been a lot of dialogue between the police and social work as part of that process.

The process is transferable. The figures reflect the fact that a highly successful approach is being taken to youth justice in Scotland—there has been a reduction in youth criminality. It is now understood that organisations, when they work together well, have an impact and achieve success. There is evidence that the position is ever improving in that respect.

On balance, taking into account the detriments of having children in the PVG scheme—there are such detriments—it is better to manage those in the existing constructs for youth justice and child welfare than it is to manage them in a criminal context.

Ross Greer

I have an unrelated question about the conditions in which it would be possible to prescribe under the bill. Those conditions are not detailed but would be the subject of further regulation. I understand why providing such powers is necessary, but I am often loth to provide as yet undefined powers through a bill. In what timescale will the regulations that will specify what conditions it will be possible to set be agreed?

Kevin Lee

I cannot answer that question at the moment.

Ailsa Heine

It is likely that those regulations would be developed in the context of the implementation of the bill, if it is passed. That might happen within a year, but it would take place as part of a planned programme of implementation. That would be the normal expectation with such regulation-making powers.

Gerard Hart

I will say something about the policy background to those conditions, if that would be of interest. I am accountable for the operation of the barring service in Scotland. In rare cases, we encounter individuals whose behaviour we think is extremely dangerous and risky. At the moment, we do not have any powers to intervene to curtail or control their activity while they are being considered for barring. Once they have been barred, we can intervene, but we cannot do so before that has happened. In the past, there has been a period in which there has been risk. Having the ability to impose such conditions will mean that we can prescribe controls.

We cannot bar someone ahead of the process being completed but, short of that, having the conditions means that we can put in place significant limitations on what the person can and cannot do, which will be of substantial benefit to public protection. Those powers are counterbalanced by the fact that we would need to go to a sheriff to get the conditions imposed, so we would have to make the case that the conditions were justifiable and proportionate. It will be a significant benefit to the public that we will be able to use the conditions in the very few cases in which an individual’s conduct is such that that is a justifiable step to take.

10:30  

Ross Greer

I agree that it is important that the power to impose those conditions exists. However, it is important that the committee has an understanding of the process by which you will propose the specific conditions that will, potentially, be agreed to through regulation. I understand that you are not able to give us that information now, but it would be helpful if you could write to the committee as soon as possible about that.

Dr Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)

I will pick up on one of Ross Greer’s points. I apologise if I have not picked up the answer completely; the witnesses might have already explained this point. Ross Greer gave a hypothetical example of a 15-year-old who works with much younger children. It is easy to imagine that happening in a charity or a church. The witnesses have explained that, if there were known to be allegations of criminality against that 15-year-old, the 15-year-old would already be in the system. How would the church or the charity know that the 15-year-old was in the system?

Gerard Hart

There are different ways that that could happen. A child who has been involved in significant harmful behaviour will probably be part of a programme of care and welfare. They will have a social worker and other parties might be involved. The police continue to have the power to make a public-interest disclosure. They can inform an organisation in circumstances in which, they believe, there is a significant risk to the public. From my experience, it is likely that the police would speak to the 15-year-old or his or her parents and say, “Look, you need to understand that there is significant risk in your doing this work. We want you to tell the church or stop doing the work.” If the 15-year-old did not do that, the police would make the disclosure. The committee would be well advised to speak to Police Scotland, because it has a robust process for such activity.

In general, a young person who has been involved in serious sexually harmful behaviour, for example, will have a significant and rigorous pattern of people around them. It is unlikely that the behaviour that Alasdair Allan is quite correctly worried about would ever be able to be perpetrated, because of that protection.

Gail Ross

When the bill that became the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 was going through Parliament, most children’s organisations wanted the age to be raised higher than 12, and we got a commitment from the Government that it would look at raising the age. Does the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill make provision for the raising of the minimum age of criminal responsibility?

Kevin Lee

All the bill does is set out that the process of childhood convictions applies to behaviour that is carried out by those under the age of 18. It does not draw a distinction about behaviour by those who are 12 up to 17; it simply talks about behaviour by those who are under the age of 18.

Ailsa Heine

The age of criminal responsibility is set by the 2019 act, and the bill does not change that. The age is set at 12, and the Government has undertaken to review that. In the interim, while the review is on-going, the behaviour of children between the ages of 12 and 17 will be dealt with through the bill. The age of criminal responsibility is completely separate from the bill.

Gail Ross

I have a question about fees, which we touched on earlier. Let us say that Disclosure Scotland contacted someone to tell them that their five years was nearly at an end and that they had to pay a fee by a certain date. If that person did not pay the fee and fell off the scheme, what would the implications be for their volunteering or employment?

Gerard Hart

Volunteers would not pay fees, because the policy intention is that free checks for them would continue. If we were to check and find that a volunteer was still working in a regulated role but had not paid the fee, we would have to say that they and their employer were committing a criminal offence, because the scheme is mandatory. Individuals who are in regulated roles have to join the scheme and cannot leave it. Their employers cannot employ them in that role if they are not in the scheme, so they would simply have to rejoin it and could not lawfully leave at that point. Obviously, our approach would be to encourage people to rejoin rather than to resort to taking criminal proceedings against them. That is the ultimate sanction against a person who performs a regulated role without being in the scheme, but many other steps would have to be taken before that point.

Ailsa Heine

The bill sets out extended membership period procedures to cover cases in which someone fails to renew but we are aware that they are still performing a regulated role. They would not simply drop out of the scheme exactly five years later. It would be possible to extend their membership, and the process that is set out in the bill would be gone through. However, as Gerard Hart said, were they to fail to renew after various steps had been taken, they would be committing an offence by continuing to work.

The Convener

Members have exhausted their questions. I thank our witnesses for attending. We look forward to receiving the extra information that members asked for. On the basis of the evidence that it has received, the committee will select witnesses for future meetings at which it will continue to take evidence.

I suspend the meeting briefly to allow our witnesses to leave the room.

10:36 Meeting suspended.  

10:38 On resuming—  

4 September 2019

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Second meeting transcript

The Convener

Item 2 is our second evidence session on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. In September, we heard from the bill team, and today we will hear from a range of organisations with an interest in the bill. I welcome Nicola Dickie, who is chief officer for children and young people at the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities; Alison Reid, who is principal solicitor at Clan Childlaw; Sheena Brennan, who is information manager for disclosure at Police Scotland; Andrew Alexander, who is head of policy at the Law Society of Scotland; and Cheryl Campbell, who is acting director of regulation at the Scottish Social Services Council.

I ask each of you to make some brief introductory remarks on your interest in the area. We will start with Nicola Dickie.

Nicola Dickie (Convention of Scottish Local Authorities)

Good morning and thank you for the opportunity to be here. COSLA supports the broad approach in the bill, which seems to strike the right balance between protecting public safety and supporting the rehabilitation of individuals. We recognise that the current system is complex and often confusing, and we support the bill’s aims to streamline disclosure and close the loopholes. We recognise that the financial impact on local government is estimated to be minimal, but that is set against a climate of significant reductions to local government funding, so all new resource implications must be fully met by the Scottish Government.

COSLA is broadly happy with the bill, and that view is shared by our elected members, colleagues in Social Work Scotland and our heads of personnel networks.

Alison Reid (Clan Childlaw)

Clan Childlaw is a unique legal outreach service solely for children and young people in Scotland. It enables young people to have their voices heard and to participate in decision-making processes that affect them. We are specialist lawyers for children and young people. Clan Childlaw enables young people to know about their right to access free, child-centred outreach and legal help, which allows them to get support and be treated in the way that they are entitled to be treated.

The vast majority of young people that we represent are care experienced. We take issues that arise in our direct casework with young people and try to make the law better for all children and young people in Scotland. Our concern about the effect of childhood offending-type behaviours later in life has long been one of our priority policy areas and it is one in which we have practical experience. That led us to intervene in the Supreme Court last year, in the matter of an application by Lorraine Gallagher and others, to assist the court with the details of the Scottish system.

We represent children in children’s hearings every day, and the issue of disclosure arises frequently as young people are asked to accept offence-based grounds without knowing the consequences for them when they apply for a job or a college course when they reach the age of 16. We are often asked by young people who are applying for their first job whether anything will appear on their disclosure.

Given our involvement with the disclosure scheme, we have restricted our submission to the consideration of childhood behaviours only. I thank the committee for the opportunity to give evidence today, and I hope that I can be of some assistance.

Sheena Brennan (Police Scotland)

Good morning, convener and committee members. Police Scotland welcomes the opportunity to attend the meeting this morning. As the committee will know, the bill represents the first review of the primary legislation since it was enacted, and Police Scotland is very supportive of the revised terms. We have worked closely with Disclosure Scotland since the introduction of part 5 of the Police Act 1997 in Scotland and the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007, and we continue to work together on the bill and related legislation.

We welcome the current process and a number of the major changes in the bill, including the change from lifetime membership to a five-year renewable membership, which will reduce the number of scheme members and the duty on us for on-going monitoring. The change from the current form of membership to role-specific or post-specific membership through regulated roles is welcome, and the fact that the scheme will become mandatory for identified post holders or job holders addresses what we see as a shortfall in the existing legislation.

We welcome the replacement of the existing dispute process by representations to be overseen by the role of the independent reviewer. That mirrors the situation down south, where there is an independent monitor. The moving of the role with regard to responsibility for disputes around other relevant information from Police Scotland to the independent reviewer is welcome, although it will be assessed as the bill progresses.

We also welcome the fact that statutory guidance will be produced for the chief constable of Police Scotland in respect of the quality assurance framework. Police Scotland currently follows the Home Office guidelines, and we welcome the bill’s introduction of Scotland-specific guidance for the QAF. Overall, we are very supportive of the bill and we welcome the opportunity to discuss it further today.

Andrew Alexander (Law Society of Scotland)

I thank the convener and committee members for the opportunity to attend today to assist the committee in its scrutiny of the bill. The Law Society of Scotland is broadly supportive of the bill, given the way in which it balances protections for the public with the importance of rehabilitation. The simplification of the process is a welcome step. We appreciate the fact that, as a regulator and a user of the disclosure system, we have had the opportunity to engage with the Scottish Government and Disclosure Scotland on how the bill might impact our organisation.

Guidance will be important, particularly on the way in which tests of relevance and provisions on what “ought to be” disclosed will operate, in order to allow us to discharge our public functions. That will give us clarity to be able to progress with the new disclosure system and allow us to ensure that we maintain the professional principles of a regulated legal profession.

Cheryl Campbell (Scottish Social Services Council)

Good morning. The SSSC welcomes the opportunity to appear before the committee to provide evidence on the bill. We regulate the Scottish social services workforce and protect the public by carefully assessing applications for entry to our register. We also take action against those applicants and registrants whose behaviour falls short of the standard that is expected. The disclosure of information plays a key part in our assessment.

We consider that the bill represents a welcome simplification of the current system of disclosure, and the mandatory element of the PVG scheme is also welcome. We look forward to continuing to work with the Scottish Government and Disclosure Scotland to advance the bill’s aims, and I hope to be able to assist the committee today.

The Convener

Thank you. When you wish to respond to a question, please indicate to me or the clerks, and we will ensure that you are brought in. We have a broad range of topics to cover, and we begin with a question from Dr Allan.

Dr Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)

I am interested in what the bill has to say—or perhaps does not have to say—about under-16s and where they fit into the picture. We want to avoid the twin risks of letting someone under 16 who is a danger slip through the net and getting into a situation where there are too many restrictions on young people who want to do voluntary work. I am keen to hear your views on how the system works and the fact that under-16s will not be able to join the PVG scheme.

Nicola Dickie

The number of people who are under 16 and in the PVG scheme is fairly limited. COSLA has had broad discussions with professionals who support young people, and getting it right for every child means that many young people who are troublesome or have behavioural issues are already well known to support services such as social work, teaching staff and Police Scotland, depending on the level of the behavioural difficulties. Many of those young people are also involved in the children’s hearings system. We are comfortable that the bill strikes the right balance between the risk of having those young people outwith the system and having them in the system and continually monitoring their behaviour for a significant time.

Dr Allan

In previous discussions on the subject, my colleague Ross Greer has asked how, if somebody approaches a voluntary organisation, it will know whether they are in the scheme.

Nicola Dickie

The Scottish Government is clear in the policy memorandum that it will be for Police Scotland and the lead professionals to have a conversation with the young person, and they will expect the young person to disclose the information. If that does not happen, Police Scotland and the lead professionals might have to disclose the information. I am sure that Police Scotland has thoughts about that.

Sheena Brennan

I agree with Nicola Dickie. When a person under 16 has behaviour that is concerning, they will be known to a number of professionals, who will ensure that the young person does not work or volunteer—in most cases, it will be volunteering—in certain areas. You could look at that and think that there is a potential gap. However, organisations have their own safeguarding responsibilities, and if people under the age of 16 work for or volunteer with them, they will place restrictions to ensure that those who do not have a PVG certificate cannot work one to one with vulnerable children or whatever. It is a partnership-working scenario. The Scout Association works all around the United Kingdom, and it addresses its safeguarding responsibilities.

It would be unusual for an individual under the age of 16 who had behaved in such a manner to be in that situation. If they have committed an automatic barring offence, Disclosure Scotland will have to automatically disclose the offence as a duty of care.

Dr Allan

Related to those issues is the concept of spent convictions, which might affect people throughout their lives. I am keen to hear your views on how the proposals to change the system deal with that. What are your views on the way in which the rules deal with spent convictions and people’s potential for rehabilitation if they are being monitored?

Sheena Brennan

That relates to the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019, which is associated with the age of criminal responsibility due to the fact that 12 to 17-year-olds are now in a different situation because of the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. Following the management of offenders legislation, Disclosure Scotland has now implemented schedule 2 paragraph 1(8)(a) and (b) lists for filtering information, which benefits individuals who have the right to rehabilitation. If they committed a more serious offence, that would not be caught by the rehabilitation guidelines.

Alison Reid

We have some concerns about how childhood convictions are treated in the bill. We are particularly worried about children’s hearings. Given that the children’s hearings system is welfare based and looks at the best interests of the child, we feel that there is a dissonance between the negative outcome of the disclosure scheme and the welfare that the children’s hearings system is trying to achieve. We see that as problematic and potentially challengeable under article 8 of the European convention on human rights.

The purpose of the children’s hearings system is to divert a young person from their offending behaviour, and we question whether having enduring adverse consequences from childhood into adulthood is an effective and proportionate way of achieving that. That raises concerns for us around article 8.

10:15  

We are also concerned about the group of under-18s who are convicted in the adult court. Given that the Scottish Government is committed to the incorporation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and to making sure that children are looked at in a different context from adults, our view is that under-18s should not accrue convictions. If there is something serious, it could appear as other relevant information. I can say more about that. I believe that a high bar is required for other relevant information in relation to children.

Dr Allan

Finally, I have a question for the Law Society, which may or may not relate to the points that have just been made. More generally, how robust is the new system that is proposed, given that there have been legal challenges to the existing system and similar systems throughout the UK? Do you have any views on the robustness of the system in the face of possible challenges from individuals?

Andrew Alexander

Alison Reid has highlighted areas in which there is the potential for challenge, and it is always feasible that individuals might look to test, on article 8 grounds, the ways in which the disclosure system operates. There could potentially also be the prospect of challenge under article 1 of the ECHR, which concerns interference with property, because a disclosure can have a direct impact on someone’s livelihood.

The approach in the bill is reasonably robust and there is a degree of flexibility. Therefore, we are not particularly concerned about that. It would be helpful if some of the detail was fleshed out because, if we are in a situation in which the process is not fair to most of the individuals involved, there could be particular difficulties.

One of the areas that we highlighted involves the prescribed periods during which reviews could take place, because there is a degree of tension there. Often, if a disclosure is for the purposes of employment, the review process might need to be fairly quick. Equally, if the review process is particularly short, it might not allow people the opportunity to adequately represent their position, or to get independent advice on what could be some serious consequences.

We think that the bill takes a reasonable approach in the light of current decisions, although it is always difficult to future proof legislation regarding potential challenges.

Alison Reid

When I was looking at the question of compatibility with the ECHR, I was concerned about three areas, apart from the one that I have raised already around children’s hearings.

The first is around the “ought to” and relevance tests, because the law has to be foreseeable. At the moment, without the detail of what the tests are, it is really hard to be able to advise young people, or any person, about what will actually be disclosed. I therefore think that more detail around those tests is required.

The second area is around other relevant information, which I am sure we will come on to. It has to be proportionate and, given that the information is not proven information, we think that a very high bar will need to be set around the other relevant information. In addition, there should be a really close link between the disclosure and the risk that it is trying to protect against, in order for it to be compatible.

My third concern is around the complexity of the scheme. The law has to be foreseeable, and I understand that it has been simplified to some degree, but it still remains pretty complex.

Dr Allan

Thank you.

Gail Ross (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)

I want to follow up on the human rights aspect. I invite everybody to answer; however, it relates to the submission that Alison Reid made, which she mentioned just now. It states:

“A system so complex as to mean there is the lack of foreseeability, is at risk of being incompatible with Article 8 ECHR”,

which concerns respect for private and family life. Will you expand on that a bit more with regard to the challenges that there have been and how you see this as being different?

Alison Reid

The law has to be understood and it has to be foreseeable. We are trying to explain the scheme to young people who potentially have complex mental health issues, who have experienced physical and emotional abuse or trauma or who have been exposed to neglect.

We try to explain really complex concepts; it is not that each concept in itself is difficult, but it is complex once you get them altogether. I also deliver training on the subject to professionals who work with young people, and it is difficult. A person has to understand the concepts of what a conviction is; whether it is spent or unspent; other relevant information; the lists and whether the offence fits into the list or not; whether it was heard in the children’s hearings system; whether it was brought on offence grounds rather than care and protection grounds; whether there was a time lapse that has gone since the incident; and whether it is level 1 or level 2, as it now is. By the time that you have brought in all those concepts, it becomes tricky to explain. I understand that, to some extent, it needs to be complicated, because it is not straightforward; I am not trying to overstate the position.

Gail Ross

Is there any way at all that you could see it being made simpler, compared to your description of what we have now?

Alison Reid

In relation to the way that childhood offending behaviour is addressed, our view is that it should not be treated as a conviction. That would simplify the system substantially, because any childhood behaviours would be treated as other relevant information, which would take out the whole column in the table that I created in my submission to try to explain the system, and leave us with just other relevant information.

As I said before, a high bar needs to be set around what other relevant information is. There needs to be certainty around what that is, and a link between disclosure and the risk that is trying to be protected against. That would certainly simplify it for the purposes of children.

Gail Ross

Would that fit in with the second section of article 8, which is about the public safety aspect?

Alison Reid

In my view, it would, in that, if there were some circumstances that still required to be told to a prospective regulator or employer, it could be done under other relevant information, with the high bar being set, given that it relates to childhood.

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

I would like to follow on from that line of questioning, to an extent. One of the clear policy intentions of the bill is to simplify the disclosure regime; indeed, it does so by reducing the categories of disclosure from four to two. However, in creating one single level of enhanced disclosure, is there—to use Alison Reid’s terminology—a lack of “foreseeability” as to what might be disclosed? A very broad range of different types of information might now be disclosed in level 2; whereas, previously, with the three levels of enhanced disclosure, you would have a degree of predictability about what might come out.

Would the panel agree that there is potentially an issue there, and perhaps for more people than just those with childhood convictions, whose situation Alison Reid outlined?

Nicola Dickie

COSLA recognises that such matters are complex, given the nature of trying to shoehorn everybody into the same disclosure scheme. Whatever the bill ends up looking like, a publicity campaign will be desperately important for members who will be joining the scheme and for prospective employers. That will help to inform people with disclosures that they will need to come forward.

The change from four levels of disclosure to two levels is a simplification, but Daniel Johnson is right to say that that will not come without consequences. Therefore, there must be an undertaking in the financial memorandum to raise the profile of what we have done and why we have done it. That is important so that the changes are as foreseeable as they can be for people who are in the scheme, but it is also important for public perception. We must be careful to be absolutely clear about what we are trying to establish and why we want to do that. We should do that through the public conversations that we are having in relation to the age of criminal responsibility and the UNCRC. We should be aware that public awareness of such issues is growing, but raising awareness further will be an important part of our work as we move forward.

Cheryl Campbell

The Scottish Social Services Council is part of the stakeholder advisory group that is reviewing Disclosure Scotland. That is a complex area of work, because there is a diverse landscape and it is a real challenge to get the right balance between rehabilitation and protecting the public. The stakeholder advisory group meetings have shown very clearly that people are on different sides of the fence, so we have tried to come together with some sort of compromise. The bill presents that compromise, but the position is still rather complex. The bill goes some way in simplifying things while taking account of both those elements.

Daniel Johnson

I totally take Nicola Dickie’s point about the need for publicity; that stands to reason. However, the problem is that we cannot design the publicity campaign now, because we do not know what criteria will apply—that will be entirely down to guidance. Clan Childlaw and the Law Society have pointed out that the only tests that are in the bill relate to relevance and whether information ought to be disclosed. Cheryl Campbell said that there is a compromise, but we do not know what the compromise will be because we do not have the criteria in front of us. Is that a correct summary of where we are?

Cheryl Campbell

Yes—I would say so. We would welcome the opportunity to work collaboratively with Disclosure Scotland on the development of the guidance, so that all views—not only those of the Scottish Social Services Council, but those of other bodies—are taken into consideration.

Daniel Johnson

I will put a direct question to the Law Society and Clan Childlaw. Should some high-level principles be included in the bill to provide clarity and to allow for legal redress? Is there a weakness in relying on guidance to provide people with legal certainty?

Andrew Alexander

In our submission, we highlighted our concerns about using the tests of “relevant” and “ought to” without there being guidance in place. People who apply for disclosure and those who are in receipt of it require a degree of certainty, so we must ensure that we have the correct balance. It is a difficult area and there might need to be a degree of flexibility. We do not know whether the jurisprudence around how to deal with that balance will shift over time, not just in Scotland but across the rest of the UK, and we want to maintain consistency. It would be helpful to have guidance that could be scrutinised at this stage. Alternatively, there is the prospect of including high-level principles in the bill, with the potential of using regulations to amend them through a negative or affirmative process, should those principles find themselves out of touch with emerging jurisprudence at a later stage. However, it is an area in which being able to see what the tests of relevance ought to disclose and how they might operate will play a large part. For instance, as a regulator, we might be interested in offences under the Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1980 and think that it would be relevant for them to be disclosed.

10:30  

We would have to consider whether our approach on relevance could be sufficiently nuanced to enable us to say that, for the purposes of deciding on admission as a solicitor, such offences would be relevant and ought to be disclosed, or whether a more general set of principles might operate for positions of trust and the like. There is undoubtedly scope to provide greater clarity on the two tests.

Alison Reid

I agree. Clan Childlaw aims to be able to advise young people on what the changes would mean, what would happen and what the consequences would be. We need to make all that foreseeable, so my preference would be to have the scheme set out clearly in the bill. That would mean that the detail would be preserved and could be challenged more easily if something were to go wrong, which I hope will not happen—that is the last thing that we want. It would just make clear what the scheme is and what the tests are. People would be able to see the detail and everything would be up front. Clearly, guidance would help with that, too.

Sheena Brennan

I want to comment on the guidance and also the relevancy tests. As I understand the position, only the checks that would come through the level 2 disclosure process and would be triggered to Police Scotland would be assessed for relevancy.

We are already working with the Home Office quality assurance framework. We hope that, if the bill is passed, we would then have a set of Scottish guidelines that would probably be based on the ones that are already in existence. Such a change came about in the guidance that was issued in 2015 following recommendations made by Sunita Mason in her review of the criminal records regime. It said that the criterion should change from information that an officer thinks might be relevant to information that the officer

“reasonably believes to be relevant”

and which “ought to be” disclosed. If we could have such guidance set out in the bill, that might reassure those who are concerned about the relevancy tests that are undertaken. It would also be pertinent to our own piece of legislation and relevant to information that is retained here.

Daniel Johnson

You are saying that, at the moment, it is difficult for an individual to know precisely what will be disclosed, because of the absence of detail about the tests. Might the flip side of that coin not be that, from the perspective of members of the public, as the bill is currently drafted, they will be very reliant on Disclosure Scotland’s interpreting what the requirements and responsibilities are for roles for which they might apply through the scheme? Are there concerns about that and about the ability of Disclosure Scotland—or whichever other body might be involved—to understand those matters fully and to get them right? Is there a danger of its misunderstanding and therefore not disclosing information that would be relevant and should be disclosed?

Sheena Brennan

Only certain cases come to Police Scotland for assessment of other information that might be held, such as pending cases or intelligence information. As I understand it, when such a request is triggered, we apply our tests, which are based on the Home Office quality assurance framework that I mentioned, which is available to anyone who wishes to look it up—we have used that as a basis for our principles for undertaking tests. I am not sure whether Disclosure Scotland would make changes to our information once we send such requests back, because the chief constable would have decided that that was the other relevant information that we wanted to share with it.

I will not move on to the next steps, because that would involve looking at the dispute process and how representations might be made. However, the independent reviewer, which is a new post that came from the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 and has a much greater role in the disclosure bill, creates a better opportunity for an individual to see that information on ECHR and human rights grounds before it is shared with an employer.

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

Most or all of the evidence so far has been on the principles and the tests of ORI. I appreciate that the guidance for the new scheme does not exist yet, but Police Scotland works to the Home Office guidance. I am quite interested in the practicalities of how that works. The decision is taken by the chief constable, but I guess that some other people are also involved. I am interested to know how the police handle that and where the chief constable comes in.

Sheena Brennan

We regard ourselves as delegated signatories for the chief constable in respect of the legislation. As you might imagine, we are the ones who actually undertake the tests. When the request comes in, we assess all the information that is pertinent to the application, whether it be information about a pending case or intelligence. We then assess the information against the relevancy tests—accuracy, relevance, proportionality, and the ECHR element, which is foremost. It is about balancing the rights of the applicant against the rights of the child or the vulnerable adult.

Iain Gray

When you say “we”, who do you mean?

Sheena Brennan

I mean my team.

Iain Gray

That is the disclosure team at Police Scotland.

Sheena Brennan

Yes.

Iain Gray

How big is that team?

Sheena Brennan

Across the country, we have approximately 72 people, and 60 per cent of them are working on PVG.

Iain Gray

You said that you are a delegated signatory.

Sheena Brennan

Yes.

Iain Gray

Does that mean that the chief constable does not see the decisions at all?

Sheena Brennan

He sees them very rarely.

Alison Harris (Central Scotland) (Con)

Nicola Dickie, from COSLA, says that the cost implications will be minor. Can we explore that a bit? If the bill passes and the renewal system comes into play, the current cohort of PVG scheme members will need to go into the new scheme and that will be an initial cost.

Have you thought that, five years down the line, the bill creates a large liability for organisations that will have to be budgeted and planned for? The bill will also have implications for third sector groups—you talked about scouts and so on. Have you given that any thought?

Nicola Dickie

That is why I said that COSLA recognises that the financial memorandum estimates that the costs will be minimal. The financial memorandum is never an exact science. What it looks like when the bill is introduced is not necessarily what it looks like when it is passed.

From a local government perspective, we recognise that it is swings and roundabouts. We might well face up-front costs and then move forward. We are interested in doing some of that modelling work.

Over and above the financial, there are other resource implications. My team is responsible for the expansion of early learning and childcare, which is a significant undertaking and might require a significant workforce. We need to factor that in. There will therefore be a financial resource implication and a personnel implication, which is not limited to local authorities, because third sector and private providers are also upscaling their workforces to meet their expansion programmes.

We are interested in working with the Government to get the financial modelling as spot on as we possibly can. There has been no pushback from the Government on that.

On the earlier point about guidance, the bill has been approached in a collaborative way, so I am not here to suggest that we will not do that work.

Alison Harris

Have the other witnesses given any consideration to the transition to the new scheme? Are there any thoughts on staggering the transition? I think that there will be a financial implication, so it is important to consider that.

Cheryl Campbell

We have been doing a bit of work with Disclosure Scotland on that—so far, we have had only initial discussions.

With regard to the cost, disclosures currently have to be repeated every three years in the social services sector. People have lifetime membership of the PVG scheme, but they have to get their record updated every three years, and there is a cost for that. The five-year membership could bring some savings, although those would be offset against some new costs. I do not have any details for you on that.

There needs to be a lot of thought about the details of implementation—for example, whether everyone is moved on to the scheme initially with a staggered renewal period so that people who have recently paid to become members could renew their membership later on. Those are the sorts of discussions that need to be had. As I said, our discussions with Disclosure Scotland are still in the very early stages.

Alison Harris

It is still being discussed.

Cheryl Campbell

Yes.

Alison Harris

That is good.

Andrew Alexander

We have not looked directly at the financial implications. As an organisation that admitted 587 solicitors in the past year, that aspect does not affect us.

However, one area that we think is important—to echo the earlier comments—concerns the idea of publicity. The scheme involves a huge number of people—it is currently seven figures—and there is ultimately a criminal sanction if people continue to do such work beyond the termination of their membership, as well as a criminal sanction on the organisation that allows that to occur, which is the right approach.

There needs, therefore, to be a degree of information available across the huge number of sectors involved in the scheme to ensure that no one inadvertently falls into a challenging situation. That struck me in listening to a previous evidence session, in which it was mentioned that communications had been sent out to people to tell them that they no longer needed to be part of the scheme because they were no longer carrying out the work. The feedback on that was apparently mixed. There needs to be some resource to ensure that everyone is aware that the system is going to change, because the changes will affect such a large number of people. That would be helpful.

Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

I have some further questions about the cost, but first I would like Sheena Brennan to clarify something. In an answer to Iain Gray, you said that you had approximately 72 people around Scotland working in this area. If I heard you correctly, I think that either 60, or 60 per cent of them, are working full-time on disclosure.

Sheena Brennan

Yes—as part of my information management disclosure team, I also have responsibility across the board for data protection, subject access and freedom of information. Around 60 per cent of my 72 staff are working on the PVG scheme.

Liz Smith

Do you foresee that the bill would cause you to increase that number?

Sheena Brennan

As we have suggested to Disclosure Scotland, our concerns around staffing relate more to our responsibility for processing representations. If we are putting out other relevant information, the disclosure would have to go to the independent reviewer first. At that point, we would have to undertake another clean review, performed by individuals who had not worked on the first disclosure. Our concern is that we might need more staff to support the representations element.

With regard to the financial implications and the number of people involved, there are currently 1.2 million people on the scheme. There are not 1.2 million people working in regulated work in Scotland, but because people remain scheme members, they are subject to on-going monitoring. There could therefore be a positive impact on staffing in relation to reducing on-going monitoring, but we will have additional responsibilities in relation to applications.

Many years ago, when we first had applications, a lot of applications were being assessed and there was very little on-going monitoring. Over the years, we have had fewer applications and much more on-going monitoring. It will now go the other way and we will again have more applications and less on-going monitoring. I hope that the work would therefore even out. We have discussed with Disclosure Scotland the responsibilities of the independent reviewer.

Liz Smith

I am interested to hear that response. I understand why the work might balance out. That said, moving to a mandatory scheme means that it will become mandatory for more people to be on the list. That in itself would create some kind of cost, not just to the individuals but in relation to the monitoring involved. Am I right?

10:45  

Sheena Brennan

Rather than having 1.2 million people on the scheme, we will end up with a scheme that includes the number of core individuals who do regulated work. The beauty of the new scheme is that we will deal with people who have regulated roles or responsibilities, rather than with child or adult schemes. We are looking forward to that system because, when we assess the information, we will look specifically at the role and responsibilities that an individual would take, as opposed to taking a more generic consideration by saying, “Well, it’s within the scheme. They might be driving or they might not be driving.” The system will allow us to home in more on what we are looking at, which might be easier.

Liz Smith

I am interested in what you said about 1.2 million people being on the scheme but not all those people necessarily being involved in jobs that require disclosure. I know of people on the three-year disclosure system who have never been told by the group that they are working with to update their disclosure. The bill will make it clearer that there is an obligation on groups to inform people that they must be in the disclosure system. Some extra costs must be involved in that.

Sheena Brennan

We should look at good examples of organisations that have worked proactively with the turnaround of three years. We will now have a mandatory system with renewal every five years, and those responsibilities will be set out. You are right to say that, because it has not been mandatory for people to be on the scheme, there is potentially a huge risk relating to individuals who do regulated work but who have never been through the disclosure process.

We do not know the details of how the turnaround process will work, but a lot of work was done on retrospective checking when the PVG scheme was first introduced. Until we see the detail, we are assuming—or hoping—that the balance of applications against on-going monitoring will improve over time. We have a good relationship with Disclosure Scotland and we have yearly budget discussions. Our information on the independent reviewer and the numbers that we think might be involved have very much come from our discussions with Disclosure Scotland.

Liz Smith

Everybody is relatively positive about the bill’s general principles; I do not think that there is any disagreement about them, which is very good. However, when we drill down on some of the detail, I think that there are some hidden costs. We must be very clear about what those costs are and whether there might be a detrimental impact on clubs and societies that do not have very much money. First, those groups will be obliged to ensure that the people who work with them are properly told about their responsibilities. Secondly, we must be careful that, if those associations or clubs take the responsibility for paying the £59, we do not stop them doing that. I worry about that, not least because of the pressure that a lot of voluntary organisations are under. Does that concern you?

Sheena Brennan

Police Scotland is not involved in that area but, as was said in the earlier conversation, there is definitely a concern about how the proposals will impact on organisations. We do not want somebody to avoid doing something that is mandatory because of a cost implication. Under the bill, Police Scotland would become a referral agency, so if we identified that somebody who was doing regulated work was not a scheme member, we would have the opportunity to refer. That is a new provision in the bill, which we welcome.

Liz Smith

For clarity, what would happen in that instance?

Sheena Brennan

We think that, under the bill, when membership of the scheme becomes mandatory, it will be an offence for someone to do regulated work without the relevant certificate. Police Scotland would then have an opportunity to refer the case to Disclosure Scotland. Many organisations already have that referral opportunity, but we do not have it at the moment.

Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD)

I am interested in the definition of “protected adult”. Part of the three-stage test is to determine that, when an individual is undertaking a regulated role, the activities include the opportunity to have contact with protected adults or children. One of the respondents was concerned that that definition focused on adults who

“by reason of physical or mental disability, illness or old age”

require support or are receiving healthcare. The concern was that victims of domestic abuse might not meet the criteria. What do the witnesses think about the definition of a protected adult? Is it sufficient?

Andrew Alexander

When we looked at the bill, members of our mental health and disability committee raised the point that the definition of “protected adult” in section 76 was somewhat different to that in other legislation for vulnerable people. We specifically highlighted that an individual could qualify for a personal independence payment, or disability assistance as it will be in future, and need a carer to meet their assessed needs but still not be considered to be a protected adult for the purposes of the legislation. That was one area where we thought that additional consideration could be made.

We were also aware of the response from Scottish Women’s Aid, which highlighted the area. Going back to look at the definition again would be helpful.

Nicola Dickie

COSLA is a co-signatory to the equally safe plan so, if Scottish Women’s Aid has raised the point, it is worth looking at it. We do not want to jeopardise any of the good work that we are doing under the equally safe plan through unintended consequences. From a local government perspective, we would be happy to work with the Government and Disclosure Scotland to look at that.

Iain Gray

We talked a bit about people under the age of 16 who have convictions, and I want to ask about the age at which convictions should cease to be treated as childhood convictions. Clan Childlaw’s submission takes a very different view from that of the other submissions and suggests that the system should pertain until the age of 25. Why do you believe that?

Alison Reid

We included that in our submission after we had looked at the research that was provided by the Centre for Youth and Criminal Justice. Donna McEwan suggested that 25 was the appropriate age because young people are still developing up to that age. That is where the suggestion came from; perhaps you can ask the CYCJ more about that.

I am saying today that 18 is the age that is protected by the UNCRC and the principles of looking at childhood behaviour mean that that would be the cut-off point in law.

Iain Gray

I am a little confused about which age you are suggesting would be the appropriate age.

Alison Reid

The research shows that young people are developing up to the age of 25. That is why I put that in the submission. I do not know anything more than that about the research.

Under the UNCRC principles, 18 is the appropriate age.

Iain Gray

Do any of the other witnesses have a view on the idea of 25 being the appropriate age?

Andrew Alexander

We have seen the evidence and suggestions that neurological development takes place into the mid-20s. We are consulting on incorporating the UNCRC into domestic law. As Alison Reid says, that has 18 as the appropriate age.

The age of criminal responsibility has also been changed and there is the potential for that to be reviewed in future. That could be the stage at which evidence about the effects of offending in childhood stages is reviewed.

The Convener

The Children and Young People (Scotland) Act 2014 includes provisions on access to support services for looked-after children up to the age of 25. Could a special case be made for looked-after children in this instance?

Nicola Dickie

COSLA supports the principle of raising the age of criminal responsibility to 16. We understand why we have landed where we have and that we are very much on a journey. Broadly, that is where COSLA and local government sit. We need to continue to develop the evidence and ensure that we take that information into account as the bill goes forward. We would not be absolutely dismissive of such proposals, but we do not have the evidence or, perhaps, the necessary public perception at the moment. I go back to the point about ensuring that we balance the rights and needs of our children and young people—which are paramount—with consideration of public safety and public perception.

Cheryl Campbell

The SSSC does not have a fully formed position on the age at which offences should be disclosed. As Alison Reid and Andrew Alexander said, it is about providing evidence in order to make an informed decision on what the age should be. We think that there will be times when the conviction of a child might have an impact on our decision on whether that person is safe to work with some of the most vulnerable people in society.

Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)

I have a follow-up on Liz Smith’s line of questioning. I would like a wee bit more detail on what Sheena Brennan said about a person who is in regulated work being referred for not having disclosure. Do you expect people to tell you that people are doing regulated work? How will you find that out? You do not look proactively for such evidence.

Sheena Brennan

The current legislation does not provide for a referral process for Police Scotland. As we understand the bill, once the mandatory scheme is introduced, it will be an offence for a person who has not gone through the process of getting the relevant disclosure to do regulated work. If police officers, while they are investigating a crime that relates to some other matter, identify that an individual is doing regulated work without the relevant disclosure, Police Scotland will have the opportunity to refer the case to Disclosure Scotland, which will take a decision. We would share information on that basis.

Rona Mackay

Disclosure Scotland would take the decision on whether the person was guilty of not having disclosure. What would be the outcome of that?

Sheena Brennan

My understanding is that the bill does not include detail on that. Earlier, we said that some organisations have individuals working with them who have not been through disclosure checks. The gap in the current legislation will be resolved through the mandatory element of the scheme.

Rona Mackay

Would the organisation be responsible, or would it be the individual?

Sheena Brennan

Both would be responsible. At the moment, certain offences lead to automatic barring from working with children or vulnerable adults. Disclosure Scotland does that processing, but it applies only to certain offences. Given that membership of the scheme will be mandatory, people who work within the regulated workforce will need to have disclosure. We or any other organisation might identify that somebody is doing regulated work. Under the bill, the police will have a role in referring such cases to Disclosure Scotland.

Rona Mackay

Nicola Dickie spoke about the need for a public awareness campaign before the bill is enacted. Some of the issues seem to be a bit vague. We need to be able to make it clear to the public what the sanctions will be for a person who does not have disclosure, so we will need to look at that gap.

11:00  

Nicola Dickie

Our approach needs to be proportionate. On the point about transitioning from where we are to where we need to be, we should be aware that the 1.2 million people who are on the current scheme do not all do the same things. It is in our gift to consider what we do and to ensure that, before someone is sanctioned for not being part of the mandatory scheme, we have a conversation with them and say that, if they come off the existing scheme, they do not need to transition. We need to get into that level of detail so that the system is not in a state of flux at a time when getting things right will be really important. I go back to what I said about early learning and childcare expansion because, on a personal level, I need that process to work particularly well.

There is also the on-going problem of the potential turnover of staff as a result of Brexit: we do not know what the staffing position will be. It is therefore important that we manage the transition in a helpful way, so that the system is not in a state of flux when we need it most.

Rona Mackay

The Brexit factor is very important.

Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green)

I will return to Alasdair Allan’s questions on moving the minimum age of people on the scheme to 16. I want clarification on a point that Nicola Dickie made earlier about under-16s. In respect of the very small number of under-16s who are barred or restricted in their interaction with vulnerable groups, did you say that responsibility to disclose still exists even if the individual is a minor?

Nicola Dickie

It is my understanding that, from a public safety perspective, we would disclose—

Ross Greer

I am sorry, but are you saying that the child—the 14 or 15-year-old—would be responsible for disclosing the information?

Nicola Dickie

As the policy memorandum suggests, we would not sidle up to a 14-year-old and suggest that they should disclose stuff without any support. Under all the existing policies and procedures, we have on-going relationships with children and young people and with the people who have parental responsibility for them. It is about having those conversations in a supportive and informed way. I do not think for a minute that the issue should be dealt with in a black or white way by either sidling up to the voluntary organisation or stopping the person doing the work. Rather, we should say, “This is what’s in your best interests.” The conversations that take place on the front line should be about on-going protection and about children and young people’s outcomes. I do not see that changing as we move forward. The number of cases such as those to which Ross Greer referred is small.

Ross Greer

The main argument for moving the minimum age of people on the scheme to 16 seems to be that other statutory services will be involved in the lives of under-16s who have restrictions for whatever reason, but would otherwise be part of the scheme. One of my concerns is that, if a young person in that position moved between local authority areas, there might be a break, as least temporarily, in the provision of statutory services that we want to be delivered. Do the witnesses share that concern, or can they provide me with some reassurance? If the bill is passed, someone under the age of 16 who would otherwise be barred or restricted will not be required to have PVG membership. However, there could be a risk—even for a limited time—of monitoring by social workers or whoever not being continuous, due to a young person moving, for example.

Nicola Dickie

I would prefer to concentrate our efforts on ensuring that that young person would not experience a gap in provision. That would be a far more helpful way of working, because there are issues—not just those relating to Disclosure Scotland—for children and young people if they are not transitioned properly between different local authorities’ public services. We are talking about a small number of cases. For the benefit of the outcomes of those children and young people, I would prefer to work with all our professionals to ensure the transition between local authority areas and between public authorities. I would not use the bill to try to fix that: it has got things right by having a proportionate approach.

There is a separate conversation to be had about how our children and young people move between local authorities. I come back to the getting it right for every child approach. If we get that right, nothing should be unplanned, and young people should not be without the correct support, even for a limited time. The Disclosure (Scotland) Bill is only one part of that.

Ross Greer

I agree that more work needs to be done around transitions, but the issue is not that the bill would be used to solve that problem. As it stands, someone under the age of 16 can be a member of the scheme. The bill would change that. Given that the situation in relation to transitions is not perfect, the current scheme resolves that issue because an under-16 doing such regulated work would be a member. The bill will change that so that they would not be. In a world in which we acknowledge that transitions are not perfect, I am concerned that we are creating vulnerability rather than resolving an issue that is already resolved under the current scheme.

Nicola Dickie

That is certainly not the opinion of the professional associations with which I have had conversations. COSLA is clear that the bill almost has it right. I do not know whether that gives you enough reassurance.

This work is not being done in isolation: it is part of the work that we are doing on youth justice and the children’s hearings system. All that stuff is going on and the conversation in it is exactly the same. It just so happens that in relation to the bill we are talking about Disclosure Scotland. We have similar conversations about youth justice.

Ross Greer

I will go back to the core issues. I am still looking for a clear answer to the question about what the problem is with having under-16s as members of the PVG scheme. The bill team’s explanation is that it is about striking a balance between risk management and the administrative burden of having in the scheme a substantial number of people who would not pose a risk and would otherwise not be restricted. I understand that there is a perfectly legitimate debate to have about striking that balance and creating a system that is not overly cumbersome, but beyond administration, are there any other inherent issues with 14 or 15-year-olds being members of the PVG scheme?

Nicola Dickie

I am not sure that their being in the scheme would be proportionate when set against the risk that would be posed by such individuals. All 14 and 15-year-olds would be in, as opposed to the small minority who currently apply for the PVG scheme. I am wholly aware that there are, on the panel here, experts on the law who can comment. However, putting all 14 and 15-year-olds in the scheme and having their behaviour monitored at all times does not seem to fit with the wider conversations that we are having about children and children’s rights across the country.

Ross Greer

It is about balancing the risk between one child who is engaged in work that would be restricted if they were a few months older and the children with whom they are working. I am interested to hear Clan Childlaw’s view of that. Am I getting this right? Are we talking essentially about balancing the rights of two different sets of children—the ones who are doing the work and the ones with whom they are working?

Alison Reid

That is my understanding. I have to say that this is not an area that we have come across in practice, so we have not formed a view. Therefore, I am not sure that I can be much help to you on the issue.

Sheena Brennan

On proportionality, we are probably talking about a handful of children being individuals of concern.

Ross Greer

There are literally half a dozen.

Sheena Brennan

Absolutely. As I said earlier, organisations are responsible for ensuring that when they take on volunteers aged 14 and 15, their safeguarding and protection roles mean that those volunteers do not have one-to-one access to children, just in case. It is about organisations taking responsibility.

That might go back to the publicity and awareness campaign that needs to be run for the new legislation saying that, if an organisation has people working for it who are under 16, its responsibility is to ensure that safeguarding is in place because those people will not be subject to the legislation.

As we have said, we are probably talking about six or seven children who we are aware of who would be of concern.

Gil Paterson (Clydebank and Milngavie) (SNP)

I am going to ask a couple of questions about the lists. Do the witnesses agree with the continuation of the system of having two lists?

Alison Reid

I have made clear my position on that in relation to children. I do not think that we should be getting involved in lists. The scheme should not involve convictions for under-18s, especially those in the children’s hearings system. There is a route to further information through the relevant information, with a high bar set on that relevant information.

Sheena Brennan

Police Scotland is not involved in what is on the list. It is very much a Disclosure Scotland responsibility so it is not for us to comment on it.

Andrew Alexander

We highlighted the issue in our response. There is the ability to change the lists over time, incorporating new offences or changing for policy reasons the priority that is given to various things and, I understand, changing them by using regulations to be laid under affirmative procedure, which gives the opportunity for detailed scrutiny.

If we are looking at the division between the two lists being around issues of honesty or positions of trust, we highlighted embezzlement and fraud as separate because they can be charged as alternative offences under the same legislation. We also mentioned other offences that we thought could be included on list A, including perjury and attempting to pervert or defeat the ends of justice. We thought that those areas merited further consideration and could be changed in the bill, if that is deemed to be appropriate.

Gil Paterson

Could the system function without a list?

Andrew Alexander

It would be more challenging to operate on that basis. If everything was moved from list B to list A, more information would be brought into the domain in which it would be disclosed. There would also be concerns about shifting things the other way, so that serious offences were subject to a less strict regime.

We are also conscious of the fact that there is some consistency among the jurisdictions of the United Kingdom. We are aware that some respondents to the bill have suggested that there should be different lists based on whether the person is a young person or an adult. When we considered that, we thought that we would need to see evidence for making a distinction between lists.

There are undoubtedly different ways of approaching the issue but, overall, we were content with the list A and list B approach, with some modifications to the types of offences that sit on those lists. We are looking to safeguard the public: when solicitors are in an important position of trust and are helping people with significant issues, often at very stressful times, we need to be able to apply a robust approach when we use the disclosure system.

Cheryl Campbell

I would echo what Andrew Alexander has said. We appreciate the rationale behind having list A and list B. We would like to be assured that some sort of consultation will be done on any review of list A and list B so that we can be content that they meet the needs that we are looking for, as a regulator.

11:15  

Gil Paterson

Are the timescales that are set out in the bill in relation to lists A and B appropriate?

Nicola Dickie

The idea of the timescales being wrong was not raised by our professional advisers or in any of our conversations from a local government perspective. We are content with the timescales and the lists.

Gil Paterson

I see that no one else wishes to comment. Questions about the issue might not have arisen.

My next question might have been answered, in part, but I will ask it to see what people have to say. Do the provisions relating to childhood offences—namely no time limit for review for list A offences and a five-and-a-half-year disclosure period for list B offences—suitably differentiate childhood offending?

Alison Reid

My view is that that is an arbitrary distinction that feeds into the difficulties that I have with the approach, particularly in relation to the children’s hearings system. The whole system is set up to do what is best for the welfare of the child, but we are imposing difficulties on young people as they move into adulthood. Other factors come into the decision on whether a young person ends up at a children’s hearing faced with offence grounds that could lead to a conviction. When the reporter makes that decision, they look at the overall circumstances of the child and take into account what is best and what involvement the child already has with the system. The arbitrariness of whether offence grounds that could lead to a conviction are used at a children’s hearing feeds into the arbitrariness of whether a conviction applies to a young person. We should think about it as a welfare-based system, so young people in the children’s hearings system should not be given any convictions.

Nicola Dickie

We have some sympathy with the position that Alison Reid has just outlined. Again, it is about proportionality and the fact that the system is in a state of transition. I expect that we will continue to have a live conversation about how criminal responsibility applies to children and young people and about the situation that we might be in in two or three years’ time. If we create a specific list for children and young people, we will add another layer of complexity, and we are trying to strip out that complexity to a degree. There is a delicate balance to be struck between the arbitrary nature of the issue and the rights of children and young people more generally.

Gil Paterson

Do you have any suggestions for changes to the offences on lists A and B?

Cheryl Campbell

I go back to what Andrew Alexander said. We identified that fraud has been taken off list A and put on to list B, while embezzlement remains on list A. From our perspective, those offences share the same characteristics of dishonesty. That is a real concern for us as a regulator that assesses people’s suitability to work with vulnerable people.

Alison Reid

We are pleased that the offence in relation to section 38 of the Criminal Justice and Licensing (Scotland) Act 2010, which is about threatening and abusive behaviour, has been moved from list A to list B. That offence has been used a lot for relatively minor offending behaviour by children in residential units, but the offence is really serious in the adult world. We are pleased that the offence has shifted from list A to list B, but that does not take away from my point about not wanting childhood convictions.

The Convener

I have some questions about other relevant information. The appeal process and the independent reviewer are new aspects of the system. Will there be greater transparency and certainty for individuals regarding whether non-conviction information will be shared as ORI? How could that be achieved so that someone could have some knowledge about what might be disclosed?

Sheena Brennan

Under the current process, individuals have an opportunity to dispute the information with Disclosure Scotland. The second dispute comes straight to Police Scotland, and the third dispute goes to a court of law. If we determine that we want to push out other relevant information, that decision will go directly to the independent reviewer for assessment. An individual will have the opportunity for that assessment to be made before the information goes to an employer. From a transparency point of view, the new system is very much a positive for the applicant.

We discussed the independent reviewer’s role and responsibilities with Disclosure Scotland. I assume that the role and responsibilities will mirror those of the independent monitor for England and Wales, which is a role that has been in place for a number of years. I am comfortable that the independent reviewer’s role and responsibilities, along with the transparency route that we are taking, will be very much a positive.

For us, the Scottish Government’s guidance in relation to the quality assurance framework is key. Individuals will be able to see the tests that are undertaken.

The Convener

How does the ORI review process work, and how might it change under the bill? Should information about the balance of the review process be included in the bill or left to guidance and regulations?

Sheena Brennan

The role of the independent reviewer is covered in the bill. Guidance tends to be part of regulations, because that means that it can be amended. We will be in a better position to tweak the independent reviewer’s role and the relationships—should that be needed as time goes on—if the guidance is included in regulations.

In relation to the review process, we want totally independent individuals to review only those cases. In our conversations with Disclosure Scotland, we discussed the possibility of 150 such requests being made a year—that is a ballpark figure. Those requests will go to the independent reviewer and should be dealt with completely separately and without any interference from anybody who has been involved in the case previously. That will ensure transparency and show the individual that a fresh pair of eyes is looking at the case. Our team has a routing system, whereby a disclosure officer might take the first inquiry, and then it might be peer checked by a lead disclosure officer before it goes further up the chain. Assessment is done at different stages to reassure the individuals whose information is being assessed.

The Convener

Are childhood convictions, including those involving looked-after children who have been through the children’s hearings system, treated differently in that process?

Sheena Brennan

All the information that we have to hand is assessed. The information is not assessed only against the paperwork that we have; sometimes we will go back to the reporting officer and assess their understanding of the background and how the circumstances came to fruition. We do a full root-and-branch assessment of all the information that we have to hand. Police Scotland looks not only at convictions but at all the documentation, which can be wide ranging and cover a number of years.

We have obviously been involved in the discussions around the age of criminal responsibility and the role of the IR, which came in under the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. We do not see a lot of work in relation to the ACR for the IR, given that we have disclosed for very few individuals under the age of 12. When we move forward and get into ORI, the 12 to 17-year-olds will automatically go to the independent reviewer in the first instance. That is quite clear.

All the information that we assess is assessed bearing in mind relevance, proportionality, accuracy and necessity, and we obviously take the ECHR into account.

Alison Reid

I am delighted to hear that. That is all really good, but it would be even better if I could have some certainty so that I could tell young people that that is happening. If something was written down, I could give them some idea about whether information would appear. At the moment, I can just say, “It probably won’t”, but I cannot go any further than that.

Sheena Brennan

We are keen to have the Scottish quality assurance framework guidance so that there can be that assurance. It is about whether the information comes to us in the first place. If something is of a minor nature, or if there is no trigger that would bring it to Police Scotland’s attention, we might never see it. That is why we have that assurance.

On the ACR, we have had a lot of discussions with the bill team; we will have another meeting tomorrow to discuss how information is recorded on police systems and how we get that information. At a certain point, it is not criminal information. If there is factual information that requires to be shared, how do we use that terminology? We need to make sure that there is a balance for the applicant and the sector.

Alison Reid

The other difficulty is that, because the relevancy test is specific to the role, a young person does not know whether anything will appear until they apply for a course or employment. It is hard to advise on that, because we just have to say, “We don’t know.”

Sheena Brennan

Again, that is where there should be publicity about whether a role is within the regulated area and whether someone is going to require a level 1 or level 2 disclosure. It will be important that there is publicity or marketing showing what the new legislation is, how things will be done, where mandatory disclosure will come in and so on.

The Convener

We have exhausted members’ questions. I thank all the witnesses for their attendance this morning.

11:28 Meeting continued in private until 11:43.  

9 October 2019

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Third meeting transcript

The Convener

Agenda item 2 is our second evidence session on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. We heard in September and October from the bill team and from a range of organisations with an interest in the bill. Today we will hear from two panels of witnesses. The first panel consists of organisations that interact with the Disclosure Scotland scheme. I welcome Ben Hall, Scottish development manager at Shared Lives Plus; Oisín Murphy-Lawless, policy, parliamentary and programme support officer for the Coalition of Care and Support Providers in Scotland; Adam Dillon, convener of the safeguarding committee for the Church of Scotland; Florence Witherow, national secretary of the Scottish Youth Football Association; and Sarah Latto, chair of the Scottish Volunteering Forum and volunteer development manager at Shelter Scotland. I invite you all to give opening statements.

Adam Dillon (Church of Scotland)

I am the convener of the safeguarding committee for the Church of Scotland. I have overall responsibility for safeguarding for the Church of Scotland, which is one of the larger voluntary organisations in Scotland. We have 38,000 members of the protecting vulnerable groups scheme. Specifically, I also deal with managing those who pose a risk within our communities and the recruitment of folk with convictions into paid positions and volunteer positions.

Florence Witherow (Scottish Youth Football Association)

I am from the Scottish Youth Football Association, which is responsible for grassroots youth football across the whole of Scotland. We cover age groups up to and including under-21s. The PVG scheme is a crucial part of our safe selection process. We are a major user of the PVG scheme, providing about 5,000 applications last year and about to hit the 5,000 mark again for 2019. It is a major part of our operations.

Sarah Latto (Shelter)

I am the chair of the Scottish Volunteering Forum. I am also the volunteer development manager for Shelter Scotland. The Scottish Volunteering Forum is a collaborative group of cross-sector organisations whose purpose is to use their collective experience and expertise to implement the strategic landscape for volunteering. In my role at Shelter Scotland, I am responsible for about 120 volunteers at any given time, and I champion innovative approaches that promote inclusion.

I have worked in volunteer support roles for more than 10 years, and I appreciate the vital role of the disclosure system in safeguarding vulnerable groups. However, I feel that the current system has some significant barriers to volunteers and that some of the proposals could also produce some barriers. Processing checks is quite complicated and takes some time. In particular, the proposals to remove PVGs for under-16s and to change the definition of regulated work could pose significant barriers to volunteers.

Ben Hall (Shared Lives Plus)

I represent the charity Shared Lives Plus and its members. The shared lives scheme is a unique model of social care whereby a vulnerable adult goes to live with or visits regularly a paid shared lives carer in their own home, where they share home and family life. It is a very stable form of care, with arrangements sometimes lasting for decades, and at times it has an astonishing impact on people’s lives. Shared Lives Plus is the network body and we represent our members from across the United Kingdom and Ireland. We have about 6,000 members, of which about 400 are in Scotland. Our members are either shared lives carers or the organisations that deliver shared lives services—they might be local authorities or third sector providers in Scotland. There are 15 shared lives schemes in Scotland, all of which are members of Shared Lives Plus, and they supported about 545 people in total last year.

Our members welcome the bill. They like the simplicity and clarity that it brings and the streamlining of the processes. They would like us to highlight two areas where changes could be made. First, being a shared lives carer is not identified as a regulated role, although shared lives is clearly covered by some of the activities as defined. In comparison, foster care, which is an analogous type of service, is defined as a regulated role. The analogy is that, in both cases, care and support is provided in people’s private homes and within family life over a long time. Secondly, our members have long campaigned and long asked us to try to find a way for the family members of a shared lives carer to be subject to an enhanced disclosure check. Those people are not paid to work and provide direct care, but they are living in a privileged position with vulnerable people over a long time. We are very happy to explore those areas with you.

Oisín Murphy-Lawless

Thank you very much for having CCPS along to provide evidence at this session. I am the policy, parliamentary and programme support officer for CCPS, which is a members’ organisation representing 80 of the largest third sector care providers in Scotland. As such, we find ourselves in an interesting position in so far as we rely on PVG because many of the people our members work with and support may fall into one of the categories of vulnerable adults or vulnerable children.

On the other side of things, many of our members work to bring people back into the system and back into employment, and they support better living choices for them. We are aware of the challenges posed by PVG in relation to people with offending convictions coming back into regular life.

We welcome the streamlining of the legislation, but we would like further clarity on how fees work within the system, on how membership cards—the non-digital interaction with the new PVG scheme—work and the impact on recruitment of other relevant information and the review process. We have a concern that it may present challenges for our members as employers.

The Convener

Thank you. We move to questions for the panel. We have two panels today, so we are quite tight for time. Please answer only if you have something to contribute, but we do not want to lose any of your valuable knowledge in this area.

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

I have a question that is specifically for Ben Hall. In your submission, you not only express some concerns about the nature of the bill but suggest amendments to the bill. How would you like to see the bill amended to address the issues that you raised in your preamble?

Ben Hall

There are two themes to the feedback that we get from our members. The first is the question of family members who are part of the shared lives household, who are most likely to be the spouses of the shared lives carers. They do not take part in the delivery of the care, so they are not subject to any police check or disclosure process, but they are clearly in a privileged position—they are sharing a private house over many years. Our members have always wanted the opportunity to ask that those people be subject to an enhanced disclosure check, just to close the circle of protection for the vulnerable adults.

Iain Gray

Would that make the situation for the model that you are talking about for adults the same as the position of the families of foster carers?

Ben Hall

It would. I understand that all the adults in a fostering household are subject to a police disclosure check, and our proposal would bring us into line with that.

Iain Gray

There was a second theme.

Ben Hall

There was a second theme, on which I was going to talk separately.

The Convener

Rona Mackay wants to come in with a supplementary question on that area, first.

Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)

Do the vulnerable adults stay overnight or are they daily visits?

Ben Hall

It is an alternative to residential care. Shared lives is a model that grew out of the closure of learning disability hospitals, when people went to live with carers. The adult placement regulations grew up to supervise that model, and it is inspected by the Care Inspectorate. People live with families. The model has evolved; there is also a short break model and a day support model, particularly for older people and people with dementia. However, probably about two thirds of the people live with the families over a significant length of time—it can be for decades. It is a very stable and heartwarming model.

The Convener

You were going to continue with a second area.

Ben Hall

The second theme is the idea of shared lives being a regulated role within the legislation. That is similar to the first argument, that the shared lives model of care is analogous to fostering. Fostering is defined specifically as a regulated role within the new bill, and there is no specific reason why fostering and shared lives should be seen differently within the legislation. Protection within shared lives, through the PVG check, operates within quite a wide protection mechanism. There is an extensive assessment—it may take three to four months—of people who want to be shared lives carers. An independent panel approves whether somebody can be a shared lives carer, and a review and monitoring process follows that. The PVG check is a core part of that process.

There has been quite a lot of growth in the area. About 70 per cent more people are supported within shared lives now than were supported three years ago. The nature of the growth presents a risk of dilution of the model. It is worth defining the model and having a regulated role so that there is no dilution and more people can benefit. It is a model of care that has a very low incidence of abuse, partly because of all the firm structures that we have for the supervision of care within a private household.

The Convener

Are those checks and balances relevant to all organisations, or is your own organisation putting them in place?

Ben Hall

We are the network body, so we do not deliver any shared lives services. They are delivered by our members, and all our members undertake all those processes. They are a core feature of a shared lives arrangement.

The Convener

Is that process voluntary for them? How much of what they do is statutory?

Ben Hall

The independent panel is a crucial part of the process. The length of the assessment is not set, but my experience is that all assessments take three months or longer. It is a similar process to fostering, with multiple visits by social workers, assessments and a report that goes to the independent panel for approval.

Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green)

I have a couple of general questions for the panel. I will focus on the issue of removing under-16s from the scheme. Given that Sarah Latto mentioned that issue in her opening remarks, and given that it is dealt with in the Scottish Volunteering Forum’s written evidence, will she lay out the forum’s specific concerns about it?

Sarah Latto

Sure. The proposal is that PVG scheme membership be removed for anyone under the age of 16. However, our evidence suggests that a lot of volunteers are in that age range and they require PVG checks or are doing regulated work.

I am sitting next to Florence Witherow, and sport is a really popular volunteering activity among young people. They do regulated work with other young people and often require PVG membership. Our concern is that, if we removed that, given that there is also the proposal to make being a PVG scheme member mandatory for doing regulated roles, a lot of organisations would interpret that as meaning that people under the age of 16 would no longer be able to do any voluntary work with vulnerable groups. We think that that would be a real shame and that it would not reflect current circumstances and roles that young volunteers fulfil.

10:15  

I will give some statistics. In 2014, Volunteer Scotland conducted research that showed that over 50 per cent of school-age children volunteer. That is quite significant; the adult volunteering rate is 26 per cent. The 2018 Scottish household survey statistics show a slight decline in youth volunteering. That survey does not cover anyone under the age of 16, but it covers 16 to 24-year-olds. We have seen a decline in adult volunteering from 29 per cent to 26 per cent in the space of a year. The volunteering for all outcomes framework was launched by the Government this year, because it wants to promote volunteering from the earliest possible age. We think that the proposal would undermine those ambitions quite significantly.

Ross Greer

I forgot to refer to my entry in the register of interests. I am one of the 38,000 Church of Scotland PVGs. I thought that it would be worth mentioning that before I ask a general question.

Sarah Latto mentioned the potential impact on under-16s participating in volunteering. I am interested in the thoughts of the rest of the panel on what impact there might be.

Adam Dillon

I am happy to offer my own opinion on that. I do not think that there would be a significant impact. We do not have a huge number of people under 18 who are PVGed, simply because we take the view that people under 18 are children and what we understand to be regulated work is reserved for an older age group. That does not preclude children from being involved in highly significant work, but that is an understanding of regulated work. We have concerns about people who are under 18 making mistakes or behaving in a way that would result in their being reported through the disclosure system and about the impact that that might have on their later lives. We take the view that children are children.

Florence Witherow

The Scottish Youth Football Association’s rules dictate that officials need to be over 16. From our point of view, that particular section of the bill would not have an impact because, as things stand, all our volunteers are over 16 years old.

Oisín Murphy-Lawless

I will speak more generally. Although we do not have a particular view on under-16s working in roles, it needs to be acknowledged that there would be a concern for our members about employers consistently erring on the side of caution in respect of the definition of regulated roles. I see our members being concerned that, if somebody did not require PVG membership, they would not necessarily feel confident about employing them. Sarah Latto has alluded to that.

Sarah Latto

To follow up on that, I will give a couple of examples of roles that young volunteers fulfil. One of our members is Befriending Networks, which is the national network for befriending in Scotland—it is worth mentioning it, as this week is befriending week. Interest Link Borders, which is one of its members, has 60 volunteers of school age. Children’s Hospices Across Scotland, which is another of our members, regularly involves young people in its hospices, and it thinks that the impact and the value that young people can bring should not be underestimated.

Ross Greer

The proportionality argument has been made in the context of removing under-16s from the scheme. It has been argued that the approach is not proportionate to the number of under-16s, the risk and safeguarding management. What is the burden of administering the scheme for under-16s? What are your views on the proportionality argument? Is there any significant difference in administering PVG membership for someone under the age of 16?

Sarah Latto

From my personal experience, there is practically no real difference.

Ross Greer

I have a specific follow-up question for Adam Dillon on the points that he made. The Church of Scotland’s policy is that anyone under the age of 18 is a child and should be treated as such. When you have people under the age of 18 doing work that you would view as regulated work if they were over 18 and that is defined as regulated work, what are the church’s safeguarding policies in relation to the vulnerable groups with which those young people might work?

Adam Dillon

First, I would like to clarify something. It is not about people under 16 taking on roles that would be perceived to be regulated work; rather, it is suggested that it would not be appropriate for them to move into a specific role that involves regulated work until they had passed a certain age. That does not mean that they could not do similar work. It is about ensuring that they have appropriate supervision and that they are with somebody who is, under the new legislation, in a position of trust in doing what we understand as regulated work. It is about ensuring that people are buddied up in that sense.

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

A number of panellists mentioned in their introductory remarks the streamlining of the process, but the flipside of that is that quite a broad range of information can be provided through a background check. Will the information that may be obtained under the proposed regime be sufficiently predictable compared with what can be obtained under the existing one?

More important, I understand that the proposed system will rely on the application of a twofold test that considers whether information is relevant and whether it ought to be provided. Are you clear about what that means?

Oisín Murphy-Lawless

I saw you express your concern about that in the committee’s previous evidence session on the bill, and I note that the representative from the Scottish Social Services Council remarked that it would be important to develop guidance with Disclosure Scotland to help to clarify that.

Although the bill does a good job in trying to simplify the scheme, that matter is definitely a concern for us. Our members work in a sector that is challenged in relation to recruitment, and it is harder for them to get the staff that they need and want to fill roles. The proposed system could be a bit of a barrier to that because potential employees could be concerned. The system is not necessarily clear, and in the previous evidence session, both the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities and the SSSC were quite keen for commitments to be made that there will be work to further clarify the system.

Speaking personally, with a human rights law hat on, I think that it is unfortunate that such cases are almost inevitably dealt with on a case-by-case basis. It is hard to provide guidance regarding foreseeability when individual cases are dealt with only as they come up. There is a body of work to be done to improve that. It would certainly help to alleviate our members’ concerns as employers, and on the other side it would help our members who are looking to bring people back into the workforce.

Daniel Johnson

It seems that there are no other views on that.

If we consider the case law, the Government has referred us to the case of R(L) v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis, in which the judge summed it up by saying that it is about proportionality. It will boil down to either Disclosure Scotland’s or Police Scotland’s understanding of the relevance of the information that it has in front of it to the role that you or others are looking to put the person into. Will Disclosure Scotland and Police Scotland have sufficient understanding of such roles to understand whether it is proportionate to provide the information that they have?

Oisín Murphy-Lawless

Again, speaking in a personal capacity, I think that we have to trust the public bodies to balance that test of proportionality. It is a fundamental test to do with the rights of the individual versus the protections that are required for society.

Speaking on behalf of our members, I note that we need to look at the review process of the independent reviewer to safeguard any differences in interpretation as to what might be relevant and what ought to be released, with a view to proportionality. Our members would be concerned that the review process should balance the need for a swift review of the information at the behest of the applicant against their getting a fair view.

We would like to see a commitment—I do not know whether the financial memorandum is the most appropriate place for it—that the review process will be sufficiently resourced and that there will be enough money and hours for the independent reviewer to consider any differing interpretations of what is relevant and what ought to be done.

Daniel Johnson

Finally, I will, in a sense, turn Ross Greer’s questions on their head. The other side of the issue of people under the age of 16 volunteering is when concerns arise because people have convictions or, more particularly, the police are aware of other relevant information that falls below the level of a criminal conviction. The intent is clearly that adolescence should be treated as a special period in people’s lives. That is what the Government has stated. Is the bill clear enough about how and when information is relevant when someone is seeking to take up a protected role?

Sarah Latto

Another of the potential paradoxes in the disclosure scheme is that under-16s are still allowed to apply for other disclosure products; they are just not allowed to apply for a PVG. If someone is under 16, it is very unlikely that any information will be disclosed. They could be given the opportunity to get a PVG in order to do regulated work, as the only information that is really vital to make a decision on whether it is appropriate for somebody to do regulated work is whether they are on one of the barred lists. It is not necessarily about sharing the disclosure information or the conviction information; it is about whether they are barred.

Florence Witherow

Following on from the point about the potential removal of some of that information, I note that, for us, a key factor is the time element. When we get PVGs that contain stuff from when somebody was over 16 or other relevant information, but not a conviction, we have a rigorous and fairly time-consuming process for making a final decision on whether the person will be offered membership or invited along to our protection panel for further assessment.

Speaking on behalf of one organisation and thinking of the time that it takes for us when we already know the exact role that the person would be carrying out, I think that, if a generic group was doing that work, there could be some serious problems with how long it would take for reviews to be conducted.

10:30  

Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

I put on the record that I hold a PVG with regard to school sport.

Lawyers have told the committee that there is a potential difference between information that is relevant and information that ought to be relevant, and it concerns us that those could be two different things. A couple of you have hinted at that. Mr Murphy-Lawless, you said that guidance would be helpful. Would it be just as helpful to have a legal interpretation of those two terms?

Oisín Murphy-Lawless

Any clarity is to be welcomed. I understand that, in your evidence session with COSLA, the SSSC and Police Scotland, there was an extensive discussion about whether the bill should contain clearer principles. Any clarity that we can get on those terms would be welcomed by both our members, who are employers, and people who are applying for jobs.

Liz Smith

In each of your organisations, you will have case history. You have to make judgments on whether people are suitable for a PVG, and you base your decision making on what has and has not worked for you. Do you feel that additional information would be helpful? You are nodding, Ms Latto. If you do feel that, will you explain what that additional information is?

Sarah Latto

I work for Shelter Scotland, which supports people who have been affected by homelessness and bad housing. A significant number of our volunteers have lived experience of homelessness and bad housing, and, as a symptom of that, a number of our volunteers have conviction histories. We have robust processes, but we also recognise that people who have convictions are entitled to have those considered. When we consider an applicant, we take a lot of time to consider in partnership with them the circumstances surrounding the conviction and the journey that they have travelled, recognising that volunteering is often part of a recovery journey.

A suggestion has come from one of our volunteers, who has a conviction. When she approached us to start volunteering, she was barred from working with vulnerable groups, and she successfully appealed that decision. She has suggested that, when conviction information comes through, it would be helpful if there was a free text box where people could share the circumstances surrounding their conviction history. She and a number of other volunteers have reported that continuously having to share their stories when they are trying to move on from the mistakes that they have made in the past can be quite traumatic as it involves constantly reliving the trauma.

We think that what that volunteer has suggested would be very helpful. One of the proposals is that, when somebody makes an application, the disclosure information will go to them first and it will be for them to decide whether they want to share it. It would be really nice if there was an opportunity for the applicant to share the circumstances surrounding that and what has happened in their life since it happened.

Liz Smith

That is helpful. Ms Witherow, you mentioned that it is time consuming to make sure that you get judgments absolutely correct. Would the scope for further information to be added be a serious barrier to you in the context of how you go about making your judgments?

Florence Witherow

Not necessarily. As I mentioned in my introduction, the PVG is only one part of our safe selection procedures. If there is an item on somebody’s PVG that we would like to know more about, we will ask them to fill out a self-declaration form, which gives them that opportunity. I suppose that, in that sense, there is a delay at our end. If we take on Ms Latto’s suggestion and there is an opportunity before it goes to the organisation, there would not necessarily be that delay. It is just about the point at which the applicant is asked to provide the information.

Liz Smith

That is helpful. On the cost of the PVG membership scheme, does anyone have concerns about the cost to those individuals who pay themselves instead of the organisation paying for them? Are you concerned that we might be putting people off coming forward as a result of that?

Adam Dillon

We are concerned that the cost is significant for low-paid workers. It is important to recognise that.

Oisín Murphy-Lawless

Our members would agree. We seek greater clarity specifically with regard to volunteers. It is not apparent whether volunteers will definitely be free of charges if they move out of volunteering and into the professional workforce, perhaps on the basis of their experience as volunteers—it is not clear whether they will be expected to contribute. We are looking at a five-yearly scheme, so people will be expected to renew regularly.

On the question of the fees and whether they are acting as a disincentive for people in low-paid work because they feel that they cannot apply for posts unless they have joined the scheme, the answer is yes—it is a further barrier to them.

Ben Hall

Recruitment of shared lives carers is always a challenge. Although they are not voluntary roles but paid roles, we should keep that in mind and try to fight against any extra barriers.

Sarah Latto

We share those concerns. There is a lack of clarity around volunteers. At present, PVG membership is free for people who are volunteering for a qualifying voluntary organisation. We feel that it is unfair to expect people to pay if, as a result of their volunteering, they move into employment, particularly given that, if someone moves into a role that is relevant to the volunteer role that they had previously, it is likely to be quite low paid and at quite a low grade to begin with. Expecting them to pay seems a bit unfair and it does not recognise the value that they added as a volunteer up to the time when they applied for paid employment.

Dr Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)

I am interested in panel members’ views about a related issue, which is the types of offences that the legislation does or should list, particularly where that impacts on the associated timescales for disclosure. The previous legislation talked about schedule 8A and 8B to the Police Act 1997 offences with associated timescales for disclosure. The new legislation talks about list A and list B offences. Do panel members think that the view that is taken about disclosure of list A and list B offences is appropriate? Are the timescales associated with those lists the right ones?

Sarah Latto

I cannot speak to the specifics of it but, from an inclusive perspective for volunteers, we would welcome the reduction in the length of time for which convictions are on people’s criminal records.

Dr Allan

I did not mean to be too technical there—sorry. There are offences included in the lists and the Scottish Government has put forward a rationale as to why it has divided the offences up as it has. The policy memorandum sets out the Government’s view about the list of offences—those that resulted in serious harm to a person, those that represented an abuse of a position of trust or displayed a degree of recklessness, and so on. Building on what you have said, Ms Latto, is there anything that you would like to see changed in this part of bill that deals with timescales and the lists of offences?

Ben Hall

As I explained, PVG operates in a significant assessment process within the shared lives scheme, so the context for offences would always be considered. The suggestions do not appear to be a threat to protected adults that we work with.

Florence Witherow

I echo that, because it falls under a much wider safe selection process. If something has been deemed no longer of relevance or if a set time period has passed, it would not seem to pose a risk to us.

Adam Dillon

We have no particular additional views on list A and list B, but I think it is because this falls into how we recruit, given the information. We are satisfied with the categorisation and the way in which there are list A and list B offences. It is down to a rigorous process in safe selection, which is the responsibility of our various organisations.

Rona Mackay

Following up on that—it also goes back to the ORI question—will your organisations have enough guidance to train people and recruit them under what is contained in the bill? The other question is whether you think that it clarifies the whole issue. An awful lot of it is down to judgment and is very subjective. Does it concern you that it will, in the end, be down to someone’s opinion in a lot of cases?

Florence Witherow

I am aware that I have made this statement a few times, but it is because we are keen to stress to all of our teams, clubs and leagues that are taking on volunteers that PVG very much has to be seen as just one part of that process. If we were to say, “Yes, as long as the PVG is all done, that is fine,” there would be the risk that you have suggested. Even before anyone can apply for their PVG, clubs or teams—or whoever it is they are volunteering with—expect to meet them, interview them and obtain two references from them, so I do not think that there is a risk there, simply because it is part of a much wider process. Ultimately the decision to grant membership to our volunteers lies with us as the national association. Again, there are so many steps in that. If we looked at PVG on its own, there could be the risk that you suggest, but because it falls under a wider process, I do not think that the risk is there.

Rona Mackay

The SYFA’s process belongs to one organisation. Thankfully, it sounds robust, but not every organisation may do the same.

Florence Witherow

Yes, that is a valid point. We might have it right, but there will potentially be other organisations out there that still view PVG as the be-all and end-all. It would be good if there could be an education process around the new legislation. There will obviously be lots of attention around it when it comes out, so if that opportunity and platform could also be used to explain to people the importance of taking those other steps, that could go a long way to reaching out to organisations that do not necessarily have all those steps in place at the moment.

Ben Hall

I would echo that and probably give a very similar response, in that it is a judgment call. If it is not a judgment call, you are drawing very hard lines that create a natural injustice in any process. That judgment is an important part of assessing risk to protected adults.

Sarah Latto

When the PVG scheme was initially launched, I worked for a local third sector interface in Fife. A big part of my job was about exactly what Ms Witherow was describing and involved providing training to local voluntary organisations on the scheme and how to fit it into their wider safeguarding process. This obviously reflects only on the experience of volunteers, but it is worth mentioning that the status of volunteers is very different from the status of paid employees. The fact that there is no contractual relationship means that the recruitment and selection processes for them can be more of a journey than an event. For example, within Shelter Scotland we do not officially take our volunteers on until they have completed their training. It is interactive, participatory training to make sure that we feel we know them as well as the people who have provided references. The PVG or the disclosure check is just one very significant but quite small part of a much wider process.

10:45  

Adam Dillon

It is important to recognise the concern that you are raising. The reporting system through PVG and disclosure is objective. The subjectivity comes from the organisations that have to consider it. When we meet once a month to consider recruiting either volunteers or paid workers for jobs, if they have any convictions, I rely on volunteers who have experience in police, social work, law and psychology and we sit together as a group. That shows a level of joined-up working, but it relies heavily on the expertise of my colleagues to paint out and understand the broader picture. We are committed to recruiting those with convictions safely.

It raises issues. I have been involved with other smaller voluntary organisations and I wonder how their safeguarding might stand up to that test, particularly when they get the information on PVGs. Not everybody will have the knowledge of what a particular charge means, the length of a particular punishment, whether that is commensurate with a minor offence or whether it is a much more serious situation. We have to recognise that we need a very robust system for this and it relies on the volunteers.

Oisín Murphy-Lawless

I will echo what the other members of the panel were saying. Our member organisations have safeguarding duties themselves. Because so many of the people they support and in some cases care for may also fall within the vulnerable categories, they take those responsibilities seriously. Like all the other panellists, our members will be looking at PVG as part of the system, but not as the be-all and end-all, because it is such a crucial part of considering whether somebody might be well suited to working in social care.

The Convener

I think that that is it. Could I ask one final question? One of the areas of concern to the committee has been around care-experienced young people who, due to their circumstances, may well have proportionately higher conviction rates than the natural population. Do you have any experience of having to deal with care-experienced people? Do you track the number of care-experienced volunteers that you have within your organisations?

Sarah Latto

We do not track it. You say that people with care experience are more likely to have convictions. They are also more likely to experience homelessness or bad housing. To give you one example, we have two volunteers in our foundations first service in Paisley. Both of them are care experienced, both of them have experienced homelessness and one of them has convictions. She very bravely wrote a blog for us last year, which was called “volunteering with convictions” and it shared the value that she added but also the trauma that she went through as a result, because her conviction related significantly to the trauma of being in care. That highlighted to me the need for the disclosure system to treat people who have convictions with dignity and to recognise that they are individuals, and that often the circumstances surrounding their conviction are symptoms of their life experiences and have not necessarily been by their own choice.

The Convener

As there are no other comments, I thank you all very much for your contributions this morning. It was extremely valuable to the committee. I will suspend for just a few moments to allow the panels to change over. Thank you.

10:50 Meeting suspended.  

10:52 On resuming—  

The Convener

We continue with our second panel of witnesses, with whom we will consider how the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill affects those with convictions. I welcome to the meeting Dughall Laing, director of Recruit With Conviction; Rose McConnachie, policy development lead with Community Justice Scotland; Dr Cynthia Marks, senior manager, operations and policy, Business in the Community; and Beth Weaver, vice-convener, Howard League Scotland. I invite the witnesses to say a few opening remarks, starting with Ms McConnachie.

Rose McConnachie (Community Justice Scotland)

I thank the committee for providing Community Justice Scotland with the opportunity to take part in this evidence session.

As the national body for community justice, we have a strong interest in having an effective disclosure system that protects vulnerable people while supporting people with convictions to access employment and education and reintegrate into their community. Our campaign, second chances, shows that access to employment, learning and volunteering are all routes to providing people with the opportunity to reintegrate successfully; they also aid their rehabilitation and ultimately reduce the likelihood of further offending. Work is a key factor in people’s desistance. Beyond wages, work provides a sense of purpose and a stake in society. Evidence indicates that, when used disproportionately, disclosure can lock people out of those opportunities.

We welcome the principles of the bill, particularly the measures around simplification, and recognise that the bill promotes a shift to a more progressive, proportionate and sustainable system for people with convictions while continuing to safeguard the vulnerable.

We are, however, concerned about the creation of a new offence of performing work that would be covered by the PVG scheme without a PVG or following a failure to renew scheme membership, thereby potentially criminalising more people. In particular, the proposed penalty of up to 12 months in custody for a summary conviction seems disproportionate for what may amount to a lapse in paperwork and is a substantial shift from the present system. Of course, a custodial sentence is also inconsistent with the recent extension of the presumption against short prison sentences.

In our evidence, we highlighted the need for accessible guidance to make the new system understandable to all who use it: people with convictions, employers and others.

Beth Weaver (Howard League Scotland)

I represent Howard League Scotland, which is Scotland’s only penal reform organisation.

We welcome the opportunity to give evidence, and we hope to build on the evidence that we have given previously in relation to the age of criminal responsibility and the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Bill. We also recognise that the proposed changes seek to achieve a much more proportionate and individualised process that balances safeguarding the public with the rights of individuals with convictions.

Our submission attended to four key areas: childhood convictions and the issue of individualised disclosure; uses of other relevant information; representation, review and appeal; and removable and non-disclosable convictions.

With regard to the first key area, we welcome the provisions that treat childhood convictions as a separate category and limit the disclosure of information relating to children and, in particular, the automatic disclosure of childhood convictions. We feel that that approach takes Scotland towards a more individualised and structured discretionary model of disclosure. With regard to the disclosure of convictions accrued in childhood, we question why such a model or approach might not be applied to adult convictions. However, we advocate for a more individualised approach to the disclosure of convictions in general.

We have suggested that, if ORI is to be disclosed, the implications of any disclosure need to be carefully evaluated in terms of proportionality and necessity in relation to the ends of public protection against the rights of individuals. We also believe that the bill should categorically rule out the disclosure of certain kinds of information that might be disclosed currently as ORI.

We welcome provisions relating to reviewable data, including rights of review, representation and appeal. While we welcome measures to include representations from the applicant, which can allow for a much more situated understanding, we propose that consideration is given to providing for an independent reviewer on first request for all reviews, rather than a review initially being undertaken by the body whose decision is to be reviewed.

We also welcome the provisions in the bill for reducing the period after which a conviction may become non-disclosable or an application for removal can be made. Drawing on research evidence produced by time-to-redemption studies, we still have questions about the disclosure of spent convictions for the purposes of public protection in circumstances where the evidence would suggest that that person is statistically no more likely than members of the non-convicted population to commit a crime in the future. We also question the rationale for continuing to disclose spent convictions if there is scope in the provisions of the bill to remove them before that point. If a conviction may be removed, that suggests that on-going disclosure is not required in the interests of protecting the public.

Finally, the onus seems to be on the individual to apply to have their conviction removed, which rather depends on their having both the knowledge and the means to do so. Ought not the responsibility properly reside with Disclosure Scotland to review the relevancy of continued disclosure of spent convictions? That the subject is required to pay a fee for consideration of removal of the conviction puts yet another barrier in the way of people with very limited means.

Dr Cynthia Marks (Business in the Community)

I thank the committee for giving us the opportunity to speak this morning.

Business in the Community is the oldest and largest business-led membership organisation dedicated to responsible business. We inspire, engage and challenge our members, and we mobilise that collective strength as a force for good in society to create a skilled, inclusive workforce today and for the future, build thriving communities in which we live and work, and innovate to repair and sustain our planet.

We welcome the direction of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, especially its focus on rehabilitation and the removal of barriers to work for people with criminal convictions. We feel that its aim of striking a balance between rehabilitation and safeguarding is also to be commended, as is the empowerment of individuals to have control over their data.

We have long been an advocate of removing barriers to employment for people with criminal convictions. With Walgreens Boots Alliance, we set up the national reducing reoffending through employment network in 2012, and we launched the ban the box campaign in the UK in 2013. Ban the box encourages employers to remove the tick box from application forms that ask about criminal convictions and to decide whether, when and how best to ask for that information later in the recruitment process. The campaign has gained traction nationally, with more than 140 employers currently signed up, covering more than 914,000 roles. It has been adopted by the civil service in England and features in the Ministry of Justice’s employer guide. The campaign was officially launched in Scotland on its fifth anniversary, in 2018, and is promoted as part of Release Scotland’s approach to recruitment.

11:00  

Dughall Laing (Recruit With Conviction)

I am one of the directors of Recruit With Conviction. We work with employers and intermediary agencies that support the one in five adults in Scotland who has a criminal conviction. We welcome the chance to provide some input into the bill. We also welcome the proposed changes, including in relation to the development of a system that should be more proportionate and the growth of independent verification.

However, we have some concerns. In particular, we are concerned about access to the information that belongs to those individuals and the costs involved; the understanding of employers and individuals of how the system is used; and the unintended impacts through the management of the system—currently, the disclosure system does not perhaps operate in the way that people would expect it to. We would like to see some of those things strengthened in the bill. Finally, we are very keen to see more independence for the third-party verifier and to understand how that role is to be used to have an oversight of the process.

The Convener

Thank you very much. We will move straight to questions from the committee.

Liz Smith

You probably heard me asking the previous panel about key legal issues that have been flagged up to us. Specifically, do you think that full clarification on a legal basis is needed of what is relevant and what ought to be relevant, as they are potentially two different things? Would clarification from a legal perspective be helpful?

Dr Marks

Yes, that would be very helpful. However, legal clarifications can sometimes be rather difficult to understand, and a lot of organisations—particularly smaller and newly started ones—might not have the background experience to translate a legal clarification, so it would be helpful to translate that into layspeak.

Liz Smith

Would it be helpful to have the legal clarification and the guidance written in straightforward English, so that everybody would understand it?

Dr Marks

Yes, it would.

Liz Smith

The previous panel raised the issue that there will be circumstances in which people will want to find out more information. I think that your organisations will feel much the same about that. Will the bill allow you to have all the information that you need to make the right decisions?

Dughall Laing

One process that needs to be involved relates to the use of the information. Members of the previous panel talked about their own safeguarding systems and processes. PVG scheme membership is part of the process; it is not the be-all and end-all. Good clarification and good understanding of how information will be used will be vital. Small businesses do not have that information or the capacity to develop that, so guidance and good support for them need to be in place from the outset.

Dr Marks

We second that. That is one of the roles for other organisations outside of what the bill can accomplish. There needs to be a wider piece of work to encourage more employers, regardless of which sector they are in, to develop such processes and to see that as one step, regardless of what sort of disclosure they are looking at or are required to get. A lot of employers will not have developed that sort of system on their own, so clarity and well-developed guidance with the bill and on the disclosures are essential.

Liz Smith

Do you think that that might impose more time restrictions on some of your staff as a result of interpreting that and having staff training? Would that be another barrier to people acting as volunteers and helping?

Dughall Laing

Training and development for organisations is our bread and butter, and we have provided training on that for seven or eight years. There is an assumption by individuals and applicants that those to whom they submit their information understand things, but they quite simply do not. Even in large organisations in which there might be a human resources department that understands the PVG system, information is not relayed to decision-making managers on the front line. Therefore, there is a very emotive process in which people do not understand the information. If the information is not presented in the best fashion, people will not get through into the labour market, because it is quite simply easier for people to say no than to say yes.

Liz Smith

Do you have any views on the financial cost of the proposed legislation?

Dr Marks

We welcome the further guidance, and it has been suggested that there will be another consultation on the process. It needs to be proportionate for small employers, particularly any employer that is trying to be responsible and will be paying for things itself. With the potential of people moving into and out of regulated roles, a further consultation on that is absolutely essential.

Rose McConnachie

I largely second that. It is worth considering the other point that was made during the earlier panel session about the resourcing of the independent reviewer. There is scope for that resource to be used more than four days a month, as was envisaged.

Dughall Laing

During the earlier panel discussion, the issue was raised that there will be transitions from volunteering to paid employment. One of our big concerns is that individuals can currently access their criminal record free under the general data protection regulation, and we would like a similar process to be maintained in the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill where the individual has pre-existing knowledge of what may or may not be disclosed to allow a judgment to be made. I know that a process is built in in which they will see that information before it goes to the employer, but that is too late. They really need to see it before that stage so that they can make an informed decision on whether they want to be part of the panel. Fundamentally, it is their information, and it needs to be protected.

The Convener

I want to ask you further about that. We have talked about other information that may be disclosed. That information would be about someone’s conviction. Other information would not be relevant.

Dughall Laing

I suppose that that is where the balance is and where the art exists. The ORI and the other information that will be presented to employers will have a bearing on whether the person is selected. The conviction information is quite cut and dried, and people can currently access that for free. We are instituting a system in which that will no longer be the case for a large section of employment. We need to maintain that access, and ORI becomes a different piece in the whole process.

Daniel Johnson

My line of questioning follows on from what I asked the first panel and, indeed, Liz Smith’s questions. Under the bill, is it sufficiently clear what information will be provided in what circumstances, given that we do not have sight of the guidance? Is that an issue for the panellists?

Rose McConnachie

Yes. Greater clarity on those things and the development of good-quality guidance are vital. The guidance is intended to support people in making decisions in a liminal space. There will be fine judgments, and the guidance cannot be black and white, as that would result in people being locked out of the system.

We think that making robust, good-quality guidance available to everybody who is involved in the process is the key. They will not all be lawyers and specialists in risk assessment. We look forward to the development of that guidance, but I do not know how much of that information needs to be in the bill at the front end. We do not have a formal view on that.

Daniel Johnson

I am interested in the view of Howard League Scotland. Its written evidence says that there should be

“a universal set of guiding principles to underpin the disclosure of ‘soft’ information”.

I wonder whether that is true of all the disclosures that might take place under the act.

Beth Weaver

That is certainly our position. We would advocate for a much more individualised approach not just to the use of other relevant information, but to the disclosure of convictions. Leaving to one side that spent convictions are not disclosed in continental Europe, there is scope in the bill to deal with the matter. A discretionary approach is taken to the disclosure of childhood convictions. What is the rationale for not adopting such an approach with adult convictions? An individualised approach would allow a case-by-case, structured approach to decisions to disclose, and that is really important in balancing rights to public protection and upholding the rights of individuals with conviction information. It has been suggested that schemes without the flexibility to permit that level of discretion cannot be compliant with article 8 of the European convention on human rights.

On the inclusion of non-conviction information, we would refer to some of Grace’s guidelines in 2014. He suggested tests that should apply to the disclosure of any such information. He asked:

“is the information indicative of the (alleged) commission of a sufficiently serious offence which it is reasonably certain was committed by the individual concerned, that is currently relevant to the purpose ... of public protection, and which the individual concerned has had an opportunity to comment meaningfully upon (where the information is of an allegation, caution, arrest, charge, or prosecution not resulting in a conviction)?”

Guidance is also available from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in the US. Although that is given to employers to help them to make sense of information that is disclosed, there are guidelines that might be extrapolated to inform a much more individualised approach to decision making on convictions. For example, three specific criteria are mentioned, which are referred to as the nature-time-nature test. You have to look at

“The nature and gravity of the offense ... The time that has passed since the offense, conduct and/or completion of the sentence”,

bearing in mind time-to-redemption studies, and

“The nature of the job held or sought.”

Further guidance is offered, which refers—the first panel talked about this—to attention to the “circumstances surrounding the offence”, the number of offences that the individual has been involved in and whether that suggests a pattern, and age at the time of conviction and/or release from prison. That allows for a much more situated approach to the disclosure of convictions.

Daniel Johnson

That sounds like a set of principles that could be codified and put in the bill.

Beth Weaver

It does.

Daniel Johnson

Does the panel agree with the Law Society of Scotland’s point that a set of principles—perhaps such as that just enunciated or similar—should be put in the bill?

Dr Marks

Yes. A consistent set of principles would give everyone confidence in the process and a transparent understanding of what is taking place and how decisions were made. That would give employers more confidence, as well. If there was a published set of standards by which everyone came to decisions, that would give everyone clarity, so I absolutely think that that would be welcomed.

Daniel Johnson

I would like to ask one final question, which is—

The Convener

I want to ask a question on that issue.

Daniel Johnson

Sorry.

The Convener

It is important that a lot of heads were nodding, but that cannot be put in the Official Report.

Do all the panellists agree with that?

Dughall Laing

I agree with that. People presume now that the PVG system almost operates in that way, but that is not true. One of the big criticisms that employers and individuals make is that that process has not been gone through. We absolutely endorse a much tighter sense of principle at the outset.

Rose McConnachie

I could not see our objecting to greater clarity and that positioning of underlying principles.

The Convener

Do you agree, Dr Weaver?

Beth Weaver

Yes.

The Convener

I am sorry to have interrupted Daniel Johnson, who has a supplementary question.

Daniel Johnson

It is my final question, and again it follows on from what I asked the previous panel. The bill and policy memorandum are relatively clear that the intent is to treat adolescence as a special point in time, and there is clarity about the offences committed. I am concerned about whether there is a grey area around other relevant information that stems from people’s behaviour and contact with the authorities under the age of 16. Is the bill clear on how and when Police Scotland may disclose that information if someone, at a later stage when they are over 16, applies for a PVG?

Dughall Laing

To turn that on its head a little, one of our concerns is that, if we are removing information for all under-16s, as soon as there is anything on there, the individual will be deemed to be far too high a risk for any employer or organisation to take on. We welcome the approach of treating young people as young people, and there is a need for the measure, but it means that those who have information reported on them at a later stage will be far more stigmatised and the assumption will be that the behaviour involved was beyond any form of acceptable behaviour. It creates that dichotomy and contrast in the process.

Daniel Johnson

That is my exact concern. Is it clear how and when such information might be disclosed?

Dughall Laing

It is not clear to me, but there are people in this room who are much more clever than I am.

Beth Weaver

I have no insight into how and when such information would be disclosed, based on the guidelines that have been provided so far.

11:15  

Daniel Johnson

Does that concern you?

Beth Weaver

Yes.

Rose McConnachie

We share that concern. The example of young people in care came up in the earlier panel. We know that young people in care experience greater contact with the police, often for things that, were they in a normal family setting, would perhaps not come to the attention of the police. We are concerned that ORI might have an unequal impact in that space. I do not think that that is the intended consequence, but we worry about that mechanism.

The Convener

Dr Allan, do you want to ask about the lists again?

Dr Allan

I have nothing to add about that.

The Convener

The earlier panel were asked about the A and B lists. Does this panel have any comment on that area?

Dughall Laing

I have quite a lot of comments on it.

The 2015 amendments that were made to the list system genuinely were a great step that gave people the opportunity to move on from their previous offences. However, the list system in its current format has not worked in any way, shape or form. A report by colleagues at Community Justice Scotland has referenced the fact that those who have not made any form of representation into the appeal system are not having their appeals taken forward. The system is not being used appropriately. One big issue is a lack of comprehension among employers and applicants as to how the list system operates.

Under the existing system, people are finding that their convictions are not automatically removed, although that should happen. It should be a fairly straightforward weeding process for the vast majority of offences, but that is not happening. There is an issue with the accessibility of information and individuals’ ability to use the system. There is a real need to strengthen that as much as possible to ensure that it happens automatically and that the process is independent.

We often find that people assume that the decisions are made by human beings but, as I understand it, they are quite commonly made by programming. That is fine, but it means that that objective information is not brought to bear in the process.

We welcomed the 2015 amendments, which were a fantastic step at the time. However, the system needs strengthening and needs to be used on a much higher level so that people have their previous convictions removed.

Similarly, to go back to Beth Weaver’s point, the arbitrary period of 15 years for an adult does not reflect the information. The reduction by four years is welcome, but my understanding is that it is purely because of the reduction of four years relating to the bulk of offences under the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and that first level of disclosure. It becomes a bit arbitrary. I suppose our question is whether there is more scope to ensure that the period reflects the evidence, which Beth Weaver laid out, instead of simply deducting four years because that has been deducted from the period relating to community disposals.

The Convener

Rose McConnachie mentioned care-experienced young people. Given that a disproportionate number of young people who are in care have engaged with the authorities and that, under the Children and Young People (Scotland) Act 2014, we extended local authority support to young people to the age of 25, is there a particular and special case to be made for care-experienced young people that what would be disclosed for them should be different from what might be done for other young people under the age of 16?

Dr Marks

Somebody in the previous panel mentioned having a free-text box and a chance to explain. That could be a consistent process for everybody, which might help young people from a care-experienced background and perhaps others who have faced challenges to explain their situation. They might feel more comfortable doing that in the process of the disclosure than in a live interview. As was said in the previous panel, it is important to recognise that that is just one aspect of how we support care-experienced young people and other young people who face particular challenges, especially in supporting them into employment. Employers and support organisations can do a lot more outwith the bill to ensure that that kind of stigma is removed, but that might be an option for supporting them through the bill.

Beth Weaver

I have just had a thought about that. In reading about decision making around the disclosure of childhood convictions, I found that one of the circumstances in which childhood convictions might be disclosed would be when a pattern continued into adulthood. One of the difficulties is that people who are looked after or care experienced often have arrested development and less opportunity to move on in life compared to somebody who is perhaps engaged in an isolated offence at the age of 13. We also know that our prisons disproportionately rehouse, for want of a better word, a lot of people who are care experienced. Therefore, the likelihood of care-experienced people going on to develop a pattern of adulthood offending means that they are precisely the people whose childhood convictions, by implication, will be disclosed.

So, now that you have mentioned the issue, convener, I do have some concerns.

The Convener

That is not my job, but never mind.

Rose McConnachie

Care-experienced young people often feel disempowered by a lot of the experiences that they go through. Disclosure runs the risk of being further disempowering by taking away their agency over their information. However, there is something that could help empower about that. Supports and processes could be put in place to help empower people to take ownership of their journey and experiences and to help them explain where they have been, where they have come from or where they want to go. In these discussions, there is a risk that we are very deficit based, but we are talking about people with strengths and skills and there is an opportunity to help focus on that as part of how disclosure could be used.

The Convener

Indeed.

Dughall Laing

There is a need to be much more proportionate about the information that we are using and how it is assessed and passed on. Because young people who are involved in the care system are observed in a structured fashion, we know that they are much more likely to be involved with the police. We need to stop singling them out as a group and start thinking about that wider issue.

Lesley McAra’s studies have shown that people’s socioeconomic background and where they come from have a high bearing on whether they pick up a conviction, even in like-for-like situations. Similarly, a lot of the people whom we are looking to protect are young people with additional needs. More and more, we are seeing that they are the people who are coming through who have convictions from when they were younger, perhaps because of their behavioural understanding and such issues. We almost need to institute a system that looks after not just kids who have been in care but those who come from poorer backgrounds and those who have additional learning needs, because they are all much more likely to end up in the criminal justice system and the implications for them go on for much longer.

The Convener

There are no further questions from my colleagues. If you have not had the opportunity to discuss anything today but you particularly want to bring it to the committee’s attention, it would be helpful if you could provide information on it through the clerks. Thank you all for your attendance this morning. It has been very helpful.

11:23 Meeting continued in private until 11:47.  

6 November 2019

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Fourth meeting transcript

The Convener (Clare Adamson)

Good morning, and welcome to the 30th meeting in 2019 of the Education and Skills Committee. I remind everyone present to turn mobile phones and other devices to silent for the duration of the meeting.

The first item of business is our fourth evidence session on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. We have already heard from the bill team and a range of organisations with an interest in the bill. Today’s panel consists of organisations whose focus is on young people.

I thank the attendees at the focus groups that we held last night and this morning. It has been very valuable for committee members to hear about participants’ personal and practical experiences to help us to understand the impact of the protecting vulnerable groups scheme, especially on young people, both at present and in light of the bill’s proposed changes.

I welcome to the meeting Alistair Hogg, head of practice and policy, Scottish Children’s Reporter Administration; Lindsay Law, convener, Connect; Debbie Nolan, practice development adviser, Centre for Youth and Criminal Justice; Amy Woodhouse, joint acting chief executive, Children in Scotland; and Brian Houston, director of operations, and Robert Dorrian, member, Who Cares? Scotland.

The panel is large, and we are constrained for time because a meeting of the Conveners Group is due to take place at 12 o’clock. If panel members wish to answer a question, I ask them to indicate that to me, but they should not feel that they have to contribute to answering every question that is asked.

I ask the representatives of each organisation to give the committee a little introduction, setting out their experience and interaction with the disclosure scheme. Perhaps Lindsay Law could start.

Lindsay Law (Connect)

Connect’s main involvement with Disclosure Scotland is in advising parents and parent groups about the use of the disclosure scheme in school volunteering and parent-led volunteering. We also act as an intermediary body for groups that want to make applications through us.

Alistair Hogg (Scottish Children’s Reporter Administration)

I thank the committee for inviting the Scottish Children’s Reporter Administration to attend the meeting. I am sure that committee members are aware of what the children’s hearings system does and of the welfare-based nature of that system. Every day, the SCRA considers the situations of Scotland’s most vulnerable children and young people, who are referred to it for a variety of reasons, one of which is that they might have committed offences.

The SCRA’s wish is for all children and young people who are referred to it and who go through the children’s hearings system to be considered in the same way, as their needs are all the same. That is one of the fundamental principles of the system that has been in place for more than 40 years. The decisions and options that are open to a children’s hearing are the same regardless of the reason for a child or young person having been referred to it.

The SCRA supports the measures that are proposed in the bill, as it would do for any measure that would improve the life chances of the vulnerable children and young people whom it sees and whose situations it considers daily. The bill is part of a range of legislative proposals that we believe set a positive direction of travel and which we support. Some of them have already been enacted, including the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019.

The bill would significantly improve the current situation. It recognises that there is a difference between childhood and adult offending. It would end automatic disclosure and introduce a range of checks and reviews. Although the situation would still be complex, as I am sure everyone here would agree, it would be slightly less complex than the current one. The SCRA feels that some areas merit further consideration and could be further improved. We would be happy to contribute to discussion and thoughts on those areas, which include the language that is used in the bill, its complexity, the preparation of guidance, the clarity of tests that are used in review situations and the ability to provide context for situations in which disclosure might be appropriate.

However, none of those further considerations should detract from the fact that the SCRA welcomes the bill and recognises that it makes a significant improvement. In the consultation process, the SCRA set out its views and the principles upon which it felt that this piece of legislation should be set. We feel that we were listened to extremely well and that the bill now reflects the issues that we raised.

Debbie Nolan (Centre for Youth and Criminal Justice)

I thank the committee for the opportunity to give evidence. I represent the CYCJ, which is a dedicated centre that aims to support improvements to youth justice that will contribute to better lives for individuals, families and communities.

We have had a long-standing interest in disclosure and advocating for change in the disclosure regime, especially in relation to children. We have been heavily involved in the pre-legislative consultation and the development of the bill, and we have facilitated a range of stakeholder engagement events and other events in the development process.

We are involved in supporting the implementation of the Scottish Government’s youth justice strategy. The priority theme of the strategy is about improving life chances, and the issue of disclosure is a key component in that. Through our practice development service, we offer advice and guidance to people in the youth justice sphere, including young people, their families and practitioners. We regularly receive from them queries about disclosure, such as, “What do I need to disclose?”, “How long do I need to disclose it for?” and, “Should I accept offence grounds at a children’s hearing and what might that mean for us?”

I echo the comments that have been made by Alistair Hogg. The CYCJ considers the bill an opportunity for necessary reform of the disclosure system. We see it as offering a progressive step that would provide proportionality and a more individualised process. It would also balance the rights of people with convictions—including children with disclosable information, who should have the ability to move on with their lives—with the duty of public protection.

We especially welcome the measures in the bill that would enable a distinct approach to be taken to childhood conviction information, which would end the automatic disclosure of information for children aged under 18 at the time of the offence. Such information would now be listed separately, and there would be the right to review it.

We see the bill’s approach as being evidence based, which is crucial and is also a key component in a child-friendly disclosure system that promotes children’s rights and supports Scotland’s whole-system approach to children, including those involved in offending. That is vital if we are to reduce the effects of disclosure of childhood conviction information, which we know are potentially devastating and destructive.

We suggest that more could be done in the bill. We welcome the childhood measures and a whole raft of other measures, but we think that further improvements could be made if we are to maximise the opportunity. I am sure that we will discuss those areas. In particular, they relate to the coherence of the different pieces of legislation; other relevant information, or ORI; the review process and how we can maximise the use of that process and the safeguards that are put in place; the suitability of lists in respect of children; and the complexity and support in the disclosure system.

Amy Woodhouse (Children in Scotland)

I am representing Children in Scotland. For those of you who are not familiar with our work, we are the national network organisation for improving children’s lives.

I have two different perspectives on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. One perspective is that of an organisation with staff who undertake regulated work and are members of the PVG scheme; the issue is how that works for us and for other organisations in the children’s sector. The other perspective is that of an organisation that tries to promote and enhance children’s rights considering the opportunities in the bill to further children’s access to their rights. We will probably talk from that perspective in particular.

Like my colleagues who have already spoken, Children in Scotland supports the bill’s intention and views it as a positive step forward in clarifying current processes and systems, which can be very complex for many organisations that are coming to grips with them, and in its opportunity to support young people with offending records to move on and have meaningful lives.

Likewise, we have questions and comments on a number of areas. I suspect that we will get into them, so I will not lay them out now. I will talk about my experience from Children in Scotland, the experience of our members and the bill’s interface with other policy areas. For example, Children in Scotland is the secretariat for the cross-party group in the Scottish Parliament on children and young people. The issue of disclosure was brought up at a recent meeting of that group on what was then the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Bill. We can draw in learning from that, as well.

Brian Houston (Who Cares? Scotland)

I am from Who Cares? Scotland. We are an advocacy and influencing organisation that supports children, young people and adults who have experience of care. We are a membership organisation, so it is important for us to represent members’ views. The Disclosure (Scotland) Bill has been a significant bill for them to discuss and explore.

We welcome the bill because it has the potential to remove assumptions and barriers in the current disclosure system. The disproportionate impact of that system can be lifelong. It is important that we use the opportunity to explore the positive aspects of the bill and to recognise some of the hidden barriers that exist and reside in individuals. Whatever system we have—the existing one or the new one—there are barriers that young people or young adults apply to themselves. Their childhood convictions and the prospect of going through a disclosure process limit their opportunities in the future.

Although we welcome many elements of the bill, we want to have discussions and explorations in this evidence session that could improve it or clarify important bits of information.

We work with young people and adults who are aware that progressive legislation is being put in place but who have sometimes not seen the direct benefits of that as it has been implemented and interpreted. Although we understand the experience of the current system, it is important that we track that and see how the system benefits care-experienced people in the future.

10:15  

Robert Dorrian (Who Cares? Scotland)

As Brian Houston said, Who Cares? Scotland is a membership organisation. Before I begin, I note that the reason why I am here today is that I am a member of Who Cares? Scotland. I have care experience—I was in the care system from the age of four. I will talk a wee bit about that before I get into the purpose of today’s meeting.

I have had three different care settings; that is, three different families, including a failed adoption in a scenario whereby they kept my little sister, but did not keep me. I experienced loss, fear and constant worry. Notwithstanding that, I think that I have made a good account of myself. I have three degrees; most recently, I graduated with a bachelor of law degree just this year. This summer, I worked five jobs and held three volunteer roles. On paper, you would probably say that I look pretty successful. However, if you go back just a few short years, I would be reduced to just one word: “admonishment”.

I have experience of the disclosure process. I accrued an admonishment when I was 16. I have a very real interest in the bill, because it can effect change. There is a lot of conversation to be had about the intention behind the bill. My journey has been made more difficult than it had to be. Throughout my time, I have lost out on lucrative jobs, been passed over for consideration and have had to have more than one awkward conversation. That could and should have been avoided. Had the recommendations in the bill been enacted years ago, I might be in a different position from the one that I am in today.

Who Cares? Scotland wants a reality where every care-experienced individual can maximise their potential without being unnecessarily hindered by childhood or teenage criminal records. We know from our members that care-experienced individuals often self-exclude, which cannot be quantified or put in front of the committee as statistics. Because of the disclosure process, those individuals often self-exclude from volunteering roles, or roles that involve working with vulnerable groups. Our members have told us that childhood convictions have prevented them from moving on from their past. That needs to change, and the bill is an opportunity for that change. I look forward to the conversation that we will have today.

The Convener

I thank all the panel members for coming; we really appreciate the time that you have taken to be with us.

I will ask a quick question of Ms Nolan. You talked in your opening statement about

“the time of the offence”.

My understanding is that it is the date of the criminal conviction that appears on the disclosure—is that correct? Obviously, when we are talking about young people, that can be a difference of a couple of years in some circumstances.

Debbie Nolan

The provisions in the bill talk about the date of offence. For us, that is really positive; it is a real step forward and it is fundamental. As the convener alluded to, there can be lengthy delays in the process of a child committing an offence and actually being convicted of that offence. We do not deem that a child should be penalised owing to delays in that process. However, the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 speaks about the date of conviction; that is, the provisions that are for under-18s are made only if the person was under 18 at the time that they were convicted, and not at the time that they committed the offence.

That is one of the anomalies in the potentially piecemeal approach that is being taken to reform of the disclosure system. There are three key pieces of legislation, all of which will impact on whether a child needs to disclose something. If those three pieces of legislation are not fully aligned, we run the risk of the benefits not being realised. The anomaly around whether we use the date of conviction or the age at the time of the offence is a prime example of that. It is a real anomaly. We strongly advocate that it should be the date of the offence and not the date of the conviction.

The Convener

Thank you. I will move to questions from the committee.

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

Obviously, the bill brings simplification. However, the flipside of that coin is that there are only two levels of disclosure and, potentially, a very broad range of different information that could be disclosed. We are therefore very reliant on the two tests of whether the information is relevant, and whether it ought to be disclosed. Are those tests sufficiently clear for the people who will have to interpret them—namely, Disclosure Scotland—and the people who will be the subject of that information? Is more clarity needed about how the tests will operate? I direct the question towards Alistair Hogg and Debbie Nolan in the first instance, but I am interested to hear anyone else’s thoughts.

Alistair Hogg

Thank you. I think that I said in my opening comments that that is an area to which some clarity could be brought. The interpretation and application of the tests is crucial not just in terms of deciding when disclosure is appropriate, but in making the foreseeability of that clearer. Guidance on application of the tests will be critical; we need realistic examples to show under what circumstances the tests would be applied in one direction or another. It is crucial to have readily available and accessible guidance that people understand.

Debbie Nolan

I echo that: clarity is fundamental. It is really welcome that the bill enables greater individualisation of approach, particularly for children and young people. We know that flexibility and discretion are fundamental components of a rights-based system, so clarity is really important. If the tests are not entirely clear, we run the risk of making the situation more complex and less transparent. We agree that any further guidance or information about the tests that can be made available will be helpful in respect of what factors will be taken into account and how we will determine whether something is relevant and ought to be disclosed. We would like to see that in the bill or in statutory guidance, to enable greater weight to be given to that information, to make it clearer and to enable legal challenge, if required.

Daniel Johnson

I will go back a bit further. I am concerned that in case law, two of the key tests for proportionality are the seriousness of the offence and how long ago it was committed. That seems to me to be very subjective. It is certainly not intuitive to me—for example, after what length of time would the proportionality test kick in? Is it really possible to understand how the legislation will operate without seeing the guidance and the criteria and principles that it sets out? Is it an issue for the bill that we cannot test that?

Debbie Nolan

There is additional information in the bill about other factors that would be taken into account. However, there is a real need for guidance, and I agree that that should help to inform the decision-making process. Do we want to get into the details of that at this stage? We can consider the principles and the key components of the bill, but Daniel Johnson is right that guidance will help with the reality of implementation. I suppose that it is a question of sequencing and timing. Is it possible to consider the other measures without guidance, albeit that there is a clear commitment about what it will look like?

Alistair Hogg

I agree. I understand what you said about the subjective nature of applying such tests. It is impossible to articulate completely a set of rules and guidance that would lead to an inevitable conclusion; there has to be some subjectivity. Our belief is that tests need to be applied with the addition of contextual information, as I mentioned earlier. We need to think about how that could be introduced.

In terms of the importance of the guidance, one of the crucial areas will be understanding future risk. The guidance needs to acknowledge that such decisions involve application of a number of considerations, consideration of how those dictate future risk, and the striking of a balance between trying to assist the young person to move on with their life and the public interest. It is crucial that the young person who is at the centre of the process has clarity about how a decision is reached in order that they can determine whether they have a right to legal challenge. There is a right in the bill that relates to that, but only on a point of law. If the guidance is clear enough, the point of law might, if it arises, be clearer to that young person.

Debbie Nolan

On timescales, there is clear evidence that can inform the tests and help us to understand. The Howard League Scotland spoke at a previous meeting about the need to take an evidence-based approach. Research on time to redemption, for example, could really help to inform the tests.

Daniel Johnson

The tests become critically important in respect of looking at other relevant information. I think that it was the SCRA that pointed out that, under the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019, childhood convictions immediately become spent. However, there are no such provisions outside the bill for non-conviction information, while in the bill there are caveats and conditions for convictions that occur in childhood. Section 18 deals with provision of other relevant information—there are just two tests.

It strikes me that, under the bill, conviction information that pertains to a child would not be disclosable, but that other contact that a child might have had with the police, in relation to either convictions or other behaviours, could be disclosed. Is that correct? Do members of the panel share that concern?

Debbie Nolan

Yes, I certainly share that concern. We appreciate the role of the provision on other relevant information, and we recognise that there is a huge wealth of case law that has enabled such information to be used. The bill changes the process around other relevant information, but—as you outlined—there are still some real challenges in that respect.

A really high bar must be set with regard to other relevant information being disclosed. For example, what other relevant information can be disclosed? How will it be monitored? Further information around the tests in general would be beneficial, so I certainly agree that additional information about the tests for other relevant information will be fundamental.

That leads to another challenge. We might have information that could be disclosed as other relevant information although it could not be disclosed by the state under the measures in the bill. There is an anomaly in the bill. The state might decide not to disclose certain information in relation to a child, but because self-disclosure is governed by different legislation, a child could still have to self-disclose. The benefits of the legislation would therefore be null and void.

Daniel Johnson

Do any other members of the panel have points to raise that pertain to the tests?

Brian Houston

A key aspect concerns the detail of how the measures are implemented, how clarity is achieved and how decisions are communicated to care-experienced people, in particular. We have heard in testimony and evidence from care-experienced people that they are anxious about the current system and are not sure about the situation in respect of disclosure, so they avoid it. There is enormous caring intent within the care-experienced population: they want to give something back by working in caring professions, but they self-limit and exclude themselves from doing so. It is really important for them to understand the changes and the benefits that will arise from the bill.

Clarity on the guidance and around self-disclosure is important for young people as they develop into adults. They have experienced situations in which they did not know that they needed to disclose information, then found out that they needed to do so, so the view that was taken, because they did not disclose immediately, was to be suspicious of them. Important and detailed discussions need to take place about how it is communicated to people that they might benefit from the bill. That is fundamental if we are to liberate people to feel that they could play a part in the caring professions.

10:30  

Lindsay Law

I echo the point about the need for clarity. The message that we get from parent groups is that they are not clear about when they need to get volunteers through disclosure and that schools do not make that clear to them. All parent groups are made up of volunteers; they do not necessarily have experience of disclosure and PVG in other parts of their lives.

Some people have asked why it matters when a parent group says that everyone needs to have PVG checks. The issue is that care-experienced people and people who have experience of being in the criminal justice system might simply not volunteer to support their children at school, or they might withdraw from the system.

It is important that parent groups and schools are clear about when they need to ask for disclosure and about the types of work and roles that require it. We are keen to avoid parent groups and schools taking a broad-brush approach under which anyone who wants to volunteer in a school must go through disclosure, because that will not engender a situation in which the school is the hub of its community.

Amy Woodhouse

We share concerns that have been raised by members of the committee about other relevant information. They have been echoed by other organisations in the sector, including Clan Childlaw and the Centre for Excellence for Children’s Care and Protection. The issue needs to be resolved. If the bill is to proceed, further detailed and considered discussion is needed about the high threshold.

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

Through the questions from the convener and Daniel Johnson, we have drawn out two contradictions between the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. First, one uses the date of conviction for under-18s, while the other uses the date of the offence. Secondly, the requirement for state disclosure and the requirement for self-disclosure are different. For the avoidance of doubt, I want to check with the panel whether they prefer the measures in the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill to those in the 2019 act. Is it fair to say that you are pointing to flaws in the 2019 act?

Alistair Hogg

Yes. The SCRA favours the approach that is taken in the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill.

Debbie Nolan

In relation to age, the CYCJ has the same perspective. In relation to the anomaly between state disclosure and self-disclosure, our concern is more about closing that loophole, particularly for under-18s.

Iain Gray

One way of closing the loophole would be to move to the approach that is taken in the 2019 act, but that is not what you are arguing for.

Debbie Nolan

No.

Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)

I agree with Brian Houston’s point about communication being key.

I have a technical question about ORI. CELSIS has stated that its understanding is that

“the default position and the policy aim is against the disclosure of childhood information”

but that that is not set out in the bill. In its submission, the SCRA also suggests that the presumption should be that childhood conviction information should not be included, unless that is justified. I appreciate that this is a broad question, but can you say what justification there might be for including such information? Can you give examples of what relevant information should be disclosed?

Alistair Hogg

Does your question relate to other relevant information?

Rona Mackay

Yes. Can you give a general benchmark? I know that it is a difficult question.

Alistair Hogg

We agree with what has been said about the need for a very high threshold for disclosing other relevant information. However, if I have picked it up correctly, your question is whether other relevant information should ever be disclosed. Is the question about the general concept itself?

Rona Mackay

Yes—but you are saying that the caveat is that such information should not be included unless that is otherwise justified. That assumes that there would be justification for such disclosure in some cases. What might they be?

Alistair Hogg

The SCRA considers cases of children who have not just committed offences, but have engaged in seriously harmful behaviour. There are some situations—I stress that they are highly exceptional situations—in which the behaviour that has been exhibited is of such a concern that it might point to potential future risk, including risk to other people. The SCRA wants young people to be able to move on from very difficult circumstances in their childhood. You have heard a very enlightening account today from Robert Dorrian, which was absolutely intense. There is a body of research—you will have access to all of it through the CYCJ—that can direct us in how to assess that risk.

The concept of “other relevant information” is understandable, but disclosure of it, particularly in relation to behaviour that has happened during childhood or adolescence, needs a very high threshold. I recognise that the bill introduces a whole range of checks and reviews, which will hopefully lead to other relevant information being disclosed only in exceptional situations in which that is genuinely necessary. The bill mentions “relevant police information”. The first review is by the chief constable, then there is review by the independent reviewer, then there is an appeal on a point of law, so there is a three-step check.

Rona Mackay

That sounds like a very thorough process. That was a helpful response, thank you.

Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

Mr Hogg, you made the interesting point that you feel that other relevant information is an understandable concept. I think that most of us would accept that, but that is very different from applying the practice. Some of you have suggested this morning that there is confusion—or some doubt, to be more accurate—about interpretation of the guidance. Would it help if the bill clarified in law some of the key issues, specifically on the two tests of what is relevant and what might be relevant?

Alistair Hogg

That could help. It would bring greater clarity, and clarity brings a greater opportunity to understand and then, if necessary, to challenge. It could bring that benefit.

Liz Smith

Is that a common view among the panellists?

Amy Woodhouse

I do not have a specific opinion on that. I defer to others on the panel.

Liz Smith

Other witnesses have put it to us that there will potentially be quite a lot of scope for legal challenge if the bill is not clear about exactly what those two tests refer to. The committee must therefore make a judgment on whether we can enhance the bill by including some legal clarification to help with that. It is all very well to have good guidance, but if it comes down to a point of law—as two of you have mentioned this morning—that could be a complicating factor. Before we decide about some of the concerns and anomalies in the bill that you have mentioned, and before we take a step back to ensure that there is that clarification, I am keen to know whether you feel that it would be helpful.

Debbie Nolan

It would be helpful, because the unpredictability is a huge issue. It makes it hard to inform people of what might be disclosed if there are what-ifs, buts, maybes and questions about whether someone will decide that something is relevant within the timescales or that something ought to be included. Those are tricky concepts to explain to anyone, and they are very tricky concepts to explain to a child, particularly as we know that children who are involved in serious and persistent offending are more likely to have experienced adversity, trauma and loss, and they might have additional support needs. It is not good to have to say to someone who has had that raft of experiences, “Today, you are applying for a disclosure for this purpose, and that experience might be included or it might not be. Tomorrow, you will be applying for a different purpose, and the experience might be included or it might not be.”

As Who Cares? Scotland explained, there is a risk. We either overdisclose and we are penalised because we have given people too much information or we underdisclose and we are penalised because we have not given people enough information, and the person is considered a liar anyway. We are putting people in a no-win situation, because they cannot understand the system or what is going to be disclosed and what might or might not be disclosed. Coupled with that, there is a lack of support to help people to understand the system and navigate it. It is no wonder that people decide to self-deselect and say that they will not go down that route.

Liz Smith

That is a pertinent point. Would that increase the amount of work that groups have to do to ensure that they are giving accurate information for disclosure? Would it increase the burden of paperwork on you?

Debbie Nolan

It would not necessarily increase the burden. However, people do not know where to go to get accurate information. Numerous agencies are reluctant to give the information because, if they give the wrong information, it can have a detrimental impact on people’s life chances. At present, it is hard for people to know where to go.

There are some amazing organisations out there that are doing phenomenal work to support people with conviction information to understand the process and go through the system, but we need a much more rounded support package. At any stage in the journey, people should be able to access support from whoever they want to get it from, which means that we need to upskill those who support children and people who have convictions in general to understand the system. The bill will reduce some of the complexity of the system, which should make it easier, but there is still a grey area around where people can go for support and how we can ensure that good quality support is consistently and readily available to everyone.

Liz Smith

That is helpful. Thank you.

Brian Houston

We have concerns about other relevant information because of the process that young people experience in the hearings system. If there are offence grounds, the thoughtful discussion and careful consideration that happen in the hearing are about welfare. We want to get beyond the discussion about the offence to understand the context and the circumstances that created the conditions for it to occur. To get to that discussion, the young person is asked whether they accept the offence grounds. In that moment, we ask the young person for an admission of guilt when they do not have the normal supports that any citizen of this country would expect to have at such a time.

The rich discussion about the context of the offence then gets dislocated, and the conviction is carried forward with the young person. As they become an adult, the contextual discussion dissolves and is left behind. Our concern is that the information that will be introduced at that point will be other relevant information from someone else. Other relevant information relating to care experience might be about the young person’s actual experience—their trauma and difficulty—and how that expresses itself within their life. If there is no balance in that, and no re-engagement with the context, there are real and significant risks.

Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green)

I am interested in the witnesses’ thoughts on the changes to the scheme in relation to under-16s’ membership. Under the provisions in the bill, anyone aged 16 or over who takes part in regulated work and does not have a PVG will be committing an offence, but that will not be the case for under-16s, because they will not be able to join the PVG scheme.

There are two lines of argument. One is that removing under-16s from the scheme is about proportionality, because it is not proportionate for someone who is under 16 to undergo the full checks and, under the getting it right for every child approach, if anyone’s behaviour poses a risk, they should already be on social work’s radar and so on. The other argument is that anyone who engages in work with vulnerable groups should undergo a full check. What are your thoughts on the proposal to remove under-16s from the full PVG scheme?

10:45  

Amy Woodhouse

In my organisation, we have discussed who should and should not do regulated work. What I have to say might not apply to all organisations. I agree that people who are under 16 could do some things that we consider to be regulated work. However, Children in Scotland as an organisation does not give them those roles. That is not because we do not think that they could do them; it is because of the responsibilities that come with those roles. We do not think that it is fair for people in that age group to assume those responsibilities. They can perform a wide variety of roles in our organisation and our partner organisations, but we do not think that it is appropriate for them to take on roles in which there are elements of safeguarding. I appreciate that, as I said, that might not be the case in other circumstances, but that is our position.

Debbie Nolan

The only thing that I would add is that we need to recognise that the disclosure regime is part of a package of safeguards and measures that are in place. It is risky to try to boil the issue down to a particular part of the system.

Ross Greer

We have had submissions from a number of voluntary organisations. Plenty of organisations support the proposal while others raise concerns along the lines of those that Amy Woodhouse set out. We have heard concerns that fewer organisations will offer volunteering opportunities to under-16s because there will be a perception that people who want to take part in this broad area must be at least 16. Does anyone have thoughts on that?

Lindsay Law

We need to take a step back and ensure that we have clarity on regulated work, protected roles and what are currently called regulated roles.

To address what Amy Woodhouse said, I would say that people who are under 16 might not be in a position to perform the full suite of functions in a particular role, so they might not do things for which disclosure is required. Voluntary organisations need clarity on that, because some things do not need to go through the disclosure system. For example, it would be bizarre if somebody who was attending school as part of a normal school day had to undergo a disclosure check if they went to a primary school to read to other young people, but some schools are imposing that on parents and young people because they are not clear about the difference between regulated work and volunteering that is supported by someone who is doing regulated work.

Amy Woodhouse

The point that I was trying to make is that young people take part in our organisation in lots of different ways and they have lots of different responsibilities but that, with regard to regulated work, there are some additional issues that we need to consider for that age group. It might not always be appropriate for them to take part in regulated work.

Ross Greer

Lindsay, how aware are schools of the fact that, as Debbie Nolan said, the PVG scheme is not the only thing on the table? Is it seen as the be-all and end-all of the protection system?

Lindsay Law

I think that schools are aware that it is not the be-all and end-all, but when we talk to parent groups, we often hear people say, “Do you have your PVG?” or “Oh, just go and get a PVG,” as if that is where the responsibility of parent groups stops with regard to after-school activities that they run on behalf of schools.

Like other organisations that are represented on the panel, Connect views the disclosure regime as part of a suite of measures. It should certainly not be viewed as something that someone has to go through if they want to volunteer with a parent group at their child’s school. That perception can bar people from participating, because they opt out of doing anything. We want every parent, carer and family to play a full part in children’s lives, and we do not think that the barriers that are imposed, albeit by well-meaning people, deliver what those well-meaning people intended them to, which is, ultimately, to ensure the safety of vulnerable groups.

Amy Woodhouse

There is a need for clarity in the process. We know that the issue is a matter of concern in the wider voluntary sector. Indeed, we often ask whether posts in our organisation involve regulated work—we do that all the time. There is definitely a need for clarity, and a move towards talking about the roles rather than the work might help with that.

The Convener

I would like to follow up on that. Last night, when we spoke to a focus group panel, we heard the view that a move to talking about the roles rather than the activities might result in more confusion. Will you explain why you think that it would be a better idea?

Amy Woodhouse

I suppose it will depend on what we end up coming up with in terms of the description. There is quite a lot of work to be done in that regard.

As an organisation, we have struggled with the situation where regulated work forms a proportion of somebody’s job rather than their full job. Currently, one of the criteria for going through an application involves the regularity of the work. The idea that it is the functions that are undertaken that make the application necessary might be more helpful than some of the current ways of defining it.

The Convener

The committee has heard examples of people who have one role, such as classroom assistants, having various functions across local authority areas, so we are concerned that there might be less clarity if we go down the route that you suggest. Do other panel members have an opinion?

Brian Houston

We have two focuses in that regard. Normally, our focus would be the concerns and wishes of members, but we are also an employer and we want to employ care-experienced people, including ones who might have had convictions. We also have points of contact with young people across the organisation. It might not look as if some of our roles involve contact with children, but they do.

It is important to recognise that what we are trying to do with disclosure and protection is not something that happens only at one moment. A false sense of security comes from thinking that a check is all that we need to do. If there is a focus on the check and there is an assumption that everything is okay because we have done the check, it misses the point that the assessment of what is happening is dynamic—it is in front of us every day.

It is important to have clarity on people’s roles and what we are asking them to do with people and vulnerable groups. As Debbie Nolan says, a suite of things promote protection, and the check is only one part of that.

Dr Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)

The bill contains two lists of offences—list A and list B. Do members of the panel have views on the lists? Should they apply to adult and childhood convictions?

Alistair Hogg

The SCRA has some concerns about the lists and the things that are contained in them, as well as the fact that they apply to adult and childhood convictions. Our reason is that some of the offences on the lists—today is not the time to go through them in detail—are offences in relation to which young people are frequently referred to the children’s reporter, and they should be seen differently, through the lens of childhood convictions.

One of the most pertinent examples is wilful fire-raising, which I think appears in list A. As children’s reporters, we see that offence quite frequently, as young people are referred to us for it. It is reflective of childhood behaviour and reactions to difficult circumstances, rather than being an offence that needs to appear on a high-tariff list. We have concerns about some of the offences on the lists. In previous committee meetings, there have been discussions about whether a separate list is required. We would be happy to contribute to a discussion on whether that idea has some merit.

Debbie Nolan

I echo those real concerns. If we are trying to move to a more proportionate, individualised approach of structured decision making on a case-by-case basis but we still have the implementation of lists, particularly for children, it becomes problematic and challenging. The two approaches do not go together. We would prefer a situation where a small number of offences were considered for children, rather than the wide range and the lists. That is our first issue.

Our second issue—this builds on what Alistair Hogg said—is that some of the offences are really common offences for children. I know that section 38 offences have been moved to list B, but it still covers numerous offences that are committed by children. We have done a lot of work on the unnecessary criminalisation of looked-after children, and we know that many of those offences fall into that section 38 category. That is a prime example of something that flies in the face of our ability to improve the system for children.

Our third point about the lists concerns the timescales. We appreciate that there will be shorter timescales for children but, when we consider list B, they would still have to disclose the information for five and a half years, which is a significant proportion of a child’s life. The timescales appear to be based on those in the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019. There is concern that they are not based on the evidence that is available in the time-to-redemption research, which has been mentioned. There has been some improvement, but there are still issues with the list process.

Dr Allan

Someone on the panel—forgive me; I forget who it was—suggested that offences that were committed when the person was under 18 should be listed separately, with a right to review. If that is your view, how should that work? It does not have to be the person who said that who answers.

Debbie Nolan

We want a smaller number of offences to be considered for children, with a different approach to timeframes and the factors that are taken into account in determining whether something should extend beyond the arbitrary timeframe. In the current list situation, we say, “It’s been this length of time since you committed the offence,” and it is either on or off. We would like a more nuanced approach. That links back to our earlier discussions about tests and principles. A lot of what you have heard about the bill in the evidence sessions that you have held and the written evidence gives a really clear platform as to what should be part of that decision-making process, what should be part of those tests and what those principles are. If that information is brought together, it could have a real benefit in answering your question.

Dr Allan

Mr Houston, you said there is room for improvement in the bill for care-experienced people. I would be keen to hear from any of the panel, particularly Mr Dorrian, what you feel that room for improvement is. What would you like to see in the bill that is not there when it comes to care-experienced people?

Robert Dorrian

I think that the room for improvement in the bill concerns the issue of clear intention with regard to what the bill proposes to do. We were talking about lists previously, and when you put that in the context of what should be included in the bill, those two positions jar, as Debbie Nolan said.

The current system puts the onus on a child or young person to come to grips with an often overly complex process. We need to put their care experience into context. If we think about a child who might be in a residential setting, has to engage in a children’s panel or has alternative school arrangements, is it surprising that the context leading up to any convictions that they pick up is forgotten about in the process?

11:00  

We were talking about contextualisation. We spoke earlier about other relevant information and when or whether it would be appropriate to include that. We need to talk about the training for the people who make the decision on what is considered to be other relevant information and the mindset that they have when they consider what information to include.

Particularly with regard to the independent reviewer role, the bill has scope to simplify the manner in which a person can challenge information on their certificate. It also has a provision for an assumption against disclosure of offences that were committed prior to the age of 18. However, the language that is used around that is still ambiguous—we spoke about that early on in today’s discussion.

The bill has a limited ability to enable the detail behind the conviction to be discussed. That is where a lot of the discussion on what we want to achieve needs to be based. The bill does not consider either the stress that the person was under at the time or any mental health issues. As someone who has experienced care, I might have those discussions, but someone making the decision about other relevant information might not have any experience of care and might not consider it appropriate to do so. We need to balance that with whether it is appropriate. More detail is needed.

However, the contextualisation part needs to be clearly set out. A conviction should be disclosed only when absolutely necessary. There is more work to be done on the language in the bill, as well as on the support and guidance that we spoke about earlier, with regard to how that is structured.

One of my concerns is that, should there not be a statutory framework behind the process, the use of the phrase “other relevant information” leaves a lot of ambiguity and scope for different interpretations by different people. That could lead to challenge. It does not make it easy for someone who is engaging in the process but nor does it make it easy for organisations who are helping and supporting someone through that process.

Brian Houston

One of the other key elements that we need to consider is that care-experienced young adults are just migrating out of a system that has processes, some of which they have not had trust in. The disclosure system—and its associated processes—is just the next thing that they might encounter.

If we do not provide clarity on the information that is held, when it will be disclosed and what the implementation looks like, we will not promote confidence in the system. We will deny ourselves the resource that comes from that group—the caring intent that is provoked in them when they receive care. There is a more fundamental thing here about how we lift a barrier to young adults who might want to give something back.

As an employer, I interview a lot of staff who want to work with us and I am always interested in their motivation to work with children and young people. I do not mean, “Why do you want the job?”; it is much deeper than that. I am interested in what has compelled them to work with children and young people. I am always more reassured by care-experienced people when they articulate that. They are a lot clearer about it. There is an enormous potential for our country to tap into that caring resource. We need to get the technical aspects of that correct, so that we can communicate with simplicity what the new system looks like. That will generate confidence and trust among a group of people who have not had either in significant amounts. That will be better for us as a country.

Jenny Gilruth (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)

Some of the points that I was going to raise have already been covered. Brian Houston has spoken about simplifying the process and trying to get the message out there, particularly to care-experienced young people, for a variety of different reasons. As we have heard, things can be particularly confusing for care-experienced young people, whose corporate parent is the state.

Is there a need for some sort of national campaign to raise the profile of the disclosure system or to develop an education programme to explain to people in a bit more detail or in more simplistic terms how it works—just to get the message out there, given the disconnect that exists?

Brian Houston

There are two key audiences, and we represent both of them. First, there are employers. You really need to give them clarity and confidence about the potential in the bill, and to take them beyond the natural response that might be generated when they see a conviction or read something. That is not the way to recruit people. It is one element, but the way to recruit people is to understand all the skills and abilities that they could bring to a job.

The other key audience is the care-experienced community. There is something really powerful that happens in that community. Those young people talk to each other, and they may be telling each other that a given field is not a caring profession and that they might not be able to work there.

There are invisible barriers here, which Robert Dorrian touched on earlier, and they are really hard to quantify. They involve word of mouth, with people saying, “I don’t think you could work there,” or “I don’t think you’d be able to do that job.” Some of that is simply not accurate. If we progress to something that is much more embracing, then we need to communicate that very strongly to groups of people who may not be part of the system, but who will be able to apply for things with the same level of confidence that anyone might have, as it will be about their skills and abilities, not something that happened in their childhood.

Robert Dorrian

To add to what Brian Houston has said, you raised a point about corporate parenting, Ms Gilruth, referring to the responsibilities there. For me, a pragmatic approach would be to have provision for independent legal advice set out in the bill itself. There are elements where that would not be available. To have a clear point of contact for tailored advice or even an online platform for experience would make things simpler and more accessible for people who have to navigate an often complex process. There will still be barriers in place, but anything that we can do to break them down would be helpful.

To contextualise that, the stereotypical person engaging in the disclosure process may have had one or two moves, but what about the person who has had 14 or 16? The onus is on them to know about those changes, to know where they were at what time and to know about the support mechanism that is in place.

Disclosure Scotland and a number of other organisations have an opportunity to adopt a practice that recognises the role of corporate parents in ending secondary discriminatory practices against care-experienced people. I do not mean direct discrimination; I mean discrimination that is almost a by-product of the system that we are in. There is an opportunity for all corporate parents to take that into consideration as you consider and implement the bill.

Gail Ross (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)

We have touched on the interactions between the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill and the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019. I want to go a little bit further into the interaction with the minimum age of criminal responsibility, referring in particular to the Children in Scotland submission that we received. We know from our consideration of the bill during its passage through Parliament that the Government has committed to looking at raising the age further, to 14 and possibly 16, however that plays out with the evidence that is taken on that. The written evidence from Children in Scotland says:

“This would have implications for proposals within the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill.”

Can you explain to us how the two pieces of legislation will work if the minimum age is put up further to 14, or indeed to 16?

Amy Woodhouse

Others may wish to comment on this, too. We are supportive of a further increase in the minimum age of criminal responsibility, in line with the recommendations of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child, which has said that the age should be a minimum of 14, if not even higher. In some countries it is 16, and it can be even higher than that.

We view that as a change that might still come—certainly, lots of children’s rights organisations are advocating for a further increase from the recent one that raised the age from eight years to 12.

In discussions about the bill that became the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019, there was a lot of conversation about whether that age might be increased to 14 straight away rather than going to 12 first, and the implications that that might have for other areas of legislation such as this one. Legal organisations raised questions about the complexity of doing so, and the feeling was that a lot of work would be required to bring other pieces of legislation into line.

Other panel members might have more specific comments on the technical details, but at that point that idea was viewed as a barrier to raising the age higher than 12. We and other children’s rights organisations did not agree; we were firmly of the view that we could go straight to 14, if the work that was required to enable that to happen was done. All of us should still have that as our aspiration and should continue to push for it where we can.

Debbie Nolan

The CYCJ would echo that. We would welcome a commitment to consider increasing the age further, and would like to be involved in work on that.

Linked to that is the fact that we can learn from the incremental approach to the age of criminal responsibility that we have adopted. I know that, in its previous evidence session, the committee heard a lot about provisions for under-18s, such as those on childhood convictions, and facilitating the extension of an individualised and more proportionate approach to adults. There might be scope for using that as another example of an area in which we might take an incremental approach and say, “Let’s make this change for children at the moment, but let’s keep it open for review.” A fundamental part of such an approach would be to articulate and understand the impact that the bill would have if it were passed, what the effect of its implementation would be for people and what their experience might be. We should explore the data on those points to see what we can learn from it, because, clearly, there is learning to be had from such an approach.

Alistair Hogg

I agree. I am grateful to Debbie Nolan for introducing the point about the age of people to whom the bill extends, which I had been hoping would be raised at some point today. At the moment, the bill clearly articulates that it is 18, but the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 provides a template for how we might view that. We should monitor, evaluate and review it, and then consider whether the age might be pushed further than 18, to 21 or—as Clan Childlaw suggested—as far as 25.

Your question was about the implications of a further rise. Clearly, if the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 were to be reviewed and amended to increase that age, the act that the disclosure bill would become, should it be passed, would also require to be amended. The technical implication appears to be that, if the age of criminal responsibility were raised to, for example, 14, any offence—or “harmful behaviour” as it would then be called—committed by a child under the age of 14 would fall into the same category as one committed by a child under the age of 12 currently does. Any disclosure would relate exclusively to other relevant information.

Iain Gray

I have a specific question for either Brian Houston or Robert Dorrian, or both. The Who Cares? Scotland submission says that the bill should

“Recognise corporate parenting duties ... and legally enshrine the need for the new disclosure process to take these into account.”

Will you say a little more about exactly what you would be looking for to achieve that?

11:15  

Brian Houston

Our experience of engaging with Disclosure Scotland, which is a corporate parent, has been very positive. We have been trying to employ people who might have had childhood convictions, and we have always viewed the discussions that we have had and the explorations that have happened with Disclosure Scotland on a case-by-case basis as being constructive and progressive. It has also adopted its corporate parenting responsibilities very clearly and robustly. Therefore our operational experience of how the disclosure scheme is being implemented has been positive. I consider Who Cares? Scotland to be an informed employer, which wants to push into the system so that we employ not only more people with experience of care but more people who might have had childhood convictions. Our main concern is that that should translate into the wider population of employers so that they see the benefits of the approach.

Iain Gray

I am asking exactly how you would like the bill to be amended in order to reflect that.

Brian Houston

I have no further information to add.

The Convener

I am looking around the table in case anyone else wishes to speak, but I think that that concludes members’ questions.

I thank all the panel members for coming along to represent their organisations, and especially Mr Dorrian, who has attended as a representative of Who Cares? Scotland. It has been greatly appreciated.

11:16 Meeting continued in private until 11:43.  

13 November 2019

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Fifth meeting transcript

The Convener

Our next item of business is the fifth and final evidence session on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. We have heard from a range of bodies since September, and all the evidence that we have received has been helpful.

Today, we welcome to the committee the Minister for Children and Young People, Maree Todd, and her officials Kevin Lee, the bill team leader, Gerard Hart, director of protection services and policy—both from Disclosure Scotland—and Gemma Grant, who is a lawyer in the Scottish Government’s legal directorate.

I invite the minister to give her opening remarks.

The Minister for Children and Young People (Maree Todd)

Thank you for inviting me to give evidence on the general principles of the bill.

The Disclosure (Scotland) Bill is the result of extensive engagement through the day-to-day operation of Disclosure Scotland and the review of disclosure since 2016. The protection of vulnerable groups scheme is widely viewed as a vital tool to support safe recruitment and public confidence in those who carry out certain roles with vulnerable people.

Recent inquiries involving sexual abuse in sport and other spheres of life that impact children have once again raised public consciousness about the importance of safeguarding. A number of recent high-profile cases involving the exploitation of adults have also served to remind us that the PVG scheme exists to protect us all in circumstances in which we might be especially vulnerable to harm. However, it is clear that change is required to ensure that the scheme remains able to meet tomorrow’s demands.

Since becoming the Minister for Children and Young People, I have heard moving accounts of the on-going impact of disclosure for children and young people who have come into contact with the justice system. It is with that in mind that the bill makes new provisions surrounding the disclosure of childhood offending and seeks to simplify the process for adults to realise their right to apply for the removal of certain disclosure information.

The committee has focused on fees, the decision-making frameworks underpinning disclosable information and a minimum age for accessing disclosure. I acknowledge that stakeholders would like more information on those areas.

I understand the concerns of individuals and organisations about the impact of changes to fees. Although the proposals in the bill could be delivered using the current fee structure, there is a question about whether we could find better ways forward. I have an open mind on the issue and I am committed to consulting fully on fee structures. However, I am clear that the fee waiver will continue for qualifying voluntary organisations.

I am also committed to the statutory guidance on the review process that is being developed in consultation with stakeholders. Comprehensive and clear guidance will accompany the changes to the disclosure system. Our stakeholders have committed to helping us to draft the guidance and test it with their users to ensure that it meets their needs.

I understand the concern that an unintended consequence of setting a minimum age for disclosure might be that organisations avoid taking on volunteers who are under that age. In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, children under the age of 16 cannot obtain state disclosures, but that has not affected the many United Kingdom-wide organisations that offer opportunities to children. I will ensure that Disclosure Scotland and the Government more widely communicate effectively on that issue to make sure that children are not disadvantaged in obtaining volunteering opportunities.

I thank everyone who has provided evidence to the committee. We have listened carefully and we will continue to engage proactively with stakeholders to strengthen and improve the bill. I am happy to answer questions and provide more detail if the bill progresses.

The Convener

We will move straight to questions.

Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

Minister, the basic principles of the bill have been generally well received, as has its intention to simplify a number of issues. As you said, the situation is not always simple.

With that in mind, we need to consider some of the complexities that witnesses have recently flagged up to us. In its letter to the committee, the Faculty of Advocates said:

“The proportionality of the disclosure will inevitably require balancing the rights of individuals with the potential risk to members of society ... this balancing act is ‘of the greatest public importance’.”

I think that all the witnesses from whom we have heard agree with that. Minister, how confident are you that there is a good legal foundation to that statement?

Maree Todd

I am very confident that there is a good legal basis to that statement. As I explained in my letter to the committee of 21 October, the two-part test on whether information is “relevant for the purpose of the disclosure” and “ought to be included in the disclosure” is well established in the context of decisions by the police to provide other relevant information, for example, for inclusion in a disclosure certificate. The approach has been approved by multiple decisions of the United Kingdom Supreme Court.

We need to be clear about the type of information to which the two-part test applies. The two-part test for whether something is relevant for the purpose of the disclosure and ought to be included applies to three separate categories of information: ORI; childhood conviction information; and removable convictions. Although the same wording applies, the test will be applied in different contexts, depending on the information in question, the stage in the review and who is making the decision—the chief constable, ministers or the independent reviewer.

Liz Smith

Do you accept that two witnesses questioned how able they would be to interpret the different categories of information that you mentioned? Although good guidance might be forthcoming, the witnesses are concerned that it will come down to a legal interpretation, especially if a decision is challenged, and they do not feel competent and confident to make such judgments? Is that a potential concern for you in the context of the bill’s progress?

Maree Todd

It is obviously a concern if stakeholders are saying that they do not feel confident about the process. I will ask my legal official to try to clarify the situation.

Gemma Grant (Scottish Government)

As the minister said, the two-part test is well established and has been approved in multiple decisions of the Supreme Court, including in the case that was referred to in the letter from the Faculty of Advocates, that is, R(L) v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis.

The leading judgment in that case was delivered by Lord Neuberger, who commented that if the test was only one of relevance for the purpose of the disclosure, it would be insufficient to meet the proportionality test in the context of article 8 of the European convention on human rights. He said that the requirement for the chief officer to go on to consider whether the information ought to be included is a necessary part of the test for establishing proportionality.

Lord Neuberger gave examples of factors that would be considered as part of a decision about what ought to be included. They include:

“the gravity of the material involved, the reliability of the information on which it is based, whether the applicant has had a chance to rebut the information, the relevance of the material to the particular job application, the period that has elapsed since the relevant events occurred, and the impact on the applicant of including the material”.

A decision maker who is applying the tests must comply with those established principles, to ensure that the decision is lawful and proportionate.

The Faculty of Advocates said in its letter:

“We support the Minister’s comments”—

in a previous letter to the committee—

“that the test will be informed by case law from the Courts and reflected in guidance.”

It is worth making the point that, in preparing the bill, a balance has had to be struck between the need for foreseeability, which we recognise is a key component of making legislation that is consistent with ECHR requirements, and the need to allow for flexibility, which I think that witnesses have recognised is an important part of a rights-based approach. A nuanced approach, particularly in relation to childhood convictions, has been supported by a number of witnesses.

Liz Smith

Obviously, Police Scotland, Disclosure Scotland and any independent reviewer will be cognisant of the law as it stands and of the two tests. However, I think that some of the people who run organisations that have volunteers are concerned that the judgment that they must make about what is relevant information and what ought to be disclosed requires specialist information, and is therefore quite difficult.

The minister said that there would be extensive engagement with stakeholders. What will be done to ensure that the guidance that will be given to those who have to make a judgment about relevant information and what ought to be disclosed is clear and offers them an assurance about what they must do?

Gerard Hart (Disclosure Scotland)

That is an important consideration as the bill progresses. There are two on-going strands that will help with that. The current police arrangements in England and Wales have a quality assurance framework that provides a decision-making framework that helps chief constables to make decisions in line with that two-part test. I hope that, as the bill progresses, we will produce similar guidance for Scotland in order to provide a framework and structure.

At the same time, we have another strand called Scotland works for you. It involves engaging employers across the country to talk about how they can use disclosure information effectively to make balanced and proportionate decisions about allowing people with previous convictions safely back into work.

We think that a twin-track approach is needed with regard to the bill. There is the decision-making process about how to put the information into the disclosure system fairly and accurately; the other strand is about how to equip employers to use the disclosure information better. Without that latter strand, it would perhaps be more difficult to build the necessary knowledge base and attain the desired strength of decision making.

Liz Smith

That is an interesting point. I am not at liberty to disclose the name of the person whom we spoke to in private session. However, they were an employer, and they said that the information that is given to the employer is different from the self-disclosure. With regard to what you have just said, I would say that that is a potential problem. How would you address that?

Maree Todd

On the issue of separation between self-disclosure and state disclosure, we recognise that the two have to match, and we are working on solutions, particularly with regard to children.

Liz Smith

What will you do to make sure that they tie up?

Gerard Hart

As the minister has just said, the individual must be able to predict what they have to disclose. When there is no immediate, obvious or identical duty on the individual because of the operation of the rules in the “always” list with regard to what might be removed on appeal, there is a presumption that the individual does not have to disclose those matters until those appeals are exhausted. The duty of an individual to self-disclose crystallises when the state decides what will be disclosed. That principle defaults to protect the rights of the individual, rather than going the other way, so that the duty would somehow hang over the individual until the state makes a different decision.

We will do a lot of stakeholder engagement and online work to make the process clear, and that includes the calculator. We still have to work with stakeholders on how to get that message across most effectively. However, the individual will not be in an adverse position in terms of having to disclose things that they might not have to disclose later if they were successful in an appeal against having to disclose a conviction.

Liz Smith

That is helpful. I just think that there are issues about the fact that, when an employer wants to take somebody on as a volunteer, there is the potential for some information to have been disclosed by the person who wants to volunteer. That is quite an important issue, and I ask you to consider it in your engagement.

Gerard Hart

That is a possibility. However, I think that the stakeholder engagement piece of work has to be around preparing employers to interact with the legislation in a positive and progressive way.

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

Following on from Liz Smith’s line of questioning on the two tests, can you provide an example of information that would meet the relevance test but fail the “ought” test?

10:15  

Gerard Hart

I could have a stab at answering that.

Daniel Johnson

I was rather hoping that the minister would answer the question.

Maree Todd

I think I will ask my officials to answer that. You can see that we are all slightly baffled by the question.

Daniel Johnson

In some ways, your response illustrates the difficulty that we have been having. Although I accept that the test is well established in the courts, there might be a lack of clarity for people who are applying the tests and are considering what is to be disclosed, and for those who are undergoing the checks. Can you comment on the fair degree of consensus that there has been on the part of witnesses about the suggestion that it would be a good idea to establish in the bill the principles that will be applied to that “ought” test? In particular, the Law Society and the Howard League for Penal Reform gave good examples of the sorts of principles that could be included in the bill and suggested how they could maintain the element of flexibility.

Maree Todd

An obvious example of a situation in which there might be a question about whether a conviction ought to be disclosed later in life is that of an extremely early childhood conviction—say, when someone was aged 10. I would like to think that that would be carefully considered.

I will ask Gemma Grant to comment in more detail on the legal specifics that you have asked for. This is a really complex area, and I want to be absolutely sure that we get on record the accurate situation and provide you with the correct answers to your questions, so that we can move forward and develop the legislation in the simplest way possible, so that it serves the people it is meant to serve.

Gemma Grant

I will reiterate some of the factors that the Supreme Court has said would be pertinent to the decision about what ought to be included. In line with the example that the minister has given, one factor could involve the length of time that has elapsed since the conviction was accrued by an individual. On the face of it, a conviction that might be relevant to the role that a person is applying for ought not to be disclosed because it is a historical one and there has been no pattern of offending behaviour in the interim period. A further factor that might come into play in that regard might be the severity of the conviction, because, even after the passage of time, such a conviction might still be relevant and ought to be disclosed.

That aspect of the test is what ensures proportionality, as does the issue of the interference with the rights of an individual. Although the courts have recognised that, in certain circumstances, there should be bright-line rules, this is one of the areas in which it is difficult to have such bright-line rules, because it is inherent in the nature of this type of decision that having flexibility supports the rights of individuals and might, in some circumstances, allow them to move on from past offending.

Daniel Johnson

My slight issue with that is that, in the Supreme Court judgment that you cited, the judge provided a set of criteria that were similar to the ones that were suggested to us by the Howard League, and included criteria such as the circumstances of the offence, the number of offences, the age at the time of the offence and how recently the offences were committed. Why would you not include those criteria in the bill, particularly if you made them amendable by either affirmative or negative procedures, as the Law Society has suggested? That would provide welcome clarity as well as flexibility, which, rightly, you reference as being important.

Maree Todd

We are open to dialogue about whether codification could improve clarity. It might be helpful if I put the issue into context by saying that there are bright lines around the vast majority of the decisions that are made. Last year, only 600 disclosure certificates contained information relating to convictions accrued between the ages of 12 and 17. Further, of the 275,200 PVG certificates that were issued in 2018, only 401—that is, 0.15 per cent—contained ORI. Only a small number are affected by the two-part test.

Daniel Johnson

That depends on your frame of reference. In my view, 400 people sounds like a lot.

I recognise the Supreme Court judgments, but I note that those judgments apply English law in English cases. Although I understand that the courts up here accept Supreme Court judgments as guiding their decisions, would such judgments have an impact in respect of the legal status of the two tests in the bill?

Maree Todd

No, I do not think so. That would not give me any concern at all. Obviously we pay a great deal of attention to the UK Supreme Court’s judgments, whether in Scottish cases or in cases relating to other parts of the UK.

Daniel Johnson

But those judgments are not binding if they are made according to English law, even if they are judgments of the Supreme Court.

Gemma Grant

It is correct to say that they are not binding, but in this case they would be highly persuasive because the statutory test is set down in precisely the same terms.

Dr Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)

I am keen to come in briefly on the back of the minister’s example of how the system would work for someone who committed an offence when they were 10 years old. The committee has heard a lot of anecdotal evidence—I will put it that way—about the problems that someone in that situation would face if they had accepted offence grounds in a children’s hearing. In some cases, if someone does not have legal representation, they might not understand the offence grounds. Are you satisfied that the new system will deal more understandingly—if that is an adverb—with people in that situation?

Maree Todd

We understand that it is difficult for children to understand offending behaviour, and that the acceptance of offence grounds can have lifelong consequences for employment opportunities, for example. That is why the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019, the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and the bill have all sought to reduce the scope for such information to be disclosed.

The ACR act raised the age of criminal responsibility, and it provides that behaviour under the age of 12 can be disclosed only as other relevant information. The Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 provides that children’s hearings disposals become spent immediately, which means that they will never appear at disclosure level 1, which is the lowest and most common level.

The bill ends the automatic disclosure of childhood convictions and replaces it with an individual case-by-case approach. That is a real improvement on the current situation. The two 2019 acts and the bill interact to form a cohesive approach to a difficult issue that concerns us all.

Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)

Minister, I want to ask about the lists of offences, particularly the criteria that are used for the timescales for disclosure and the content of those lists. The Children and Young People’s Commissioner Scotland stated in written evidence that:

“An approach based on lists of offences is a blunt instrument which does not allow for a proper assessment of risk of future harm”,

and raised a point about whether there should be separate lists for childhood and adult offences.

The Centre for Youth and Criminal Justice raised concerns with us about

“wilful fire-raising as a List A offence”

and offences that can accrue to care-experienced children in specific circumstances. What criteria were used to decide on the content of the lists, how they were split and the timescales for disclosure?

Maree Todd

We are aware that some of the respondents to the consultation on the bill, and some witnesses to the committee, have suggested that there should be different lists for children. However, that would increase complexity, which we want to avoid. All that the lists do is act as a filter. They remove from the scope convictions that are irrelevant for state disclosure.

For convictions that are automatically non-disclosable, as a result of that filtering process the inclusion of childhood conviction information is subject to case-by-case assessment, first by ministers and then, if necessary, by an independent reviewer. We consider that tailored approach to be much more proportionate than introducing a separate list of offences in relation to childhood convictions.

Rona Mackay

We have heard concerns about the content of such lists possibly being out of proportion or not compatible. Would you work with other stakeholders to refine that?

Maree Todd

We are always willing to work closely with stakeholders. In the evidence that has been given previously, the committee will have heard just how closely Disclosure Scotland does the same. Much of the content of the bill has come about as a result of such close engagement and working together.

There are strong policy justifications for having the two different lists. Without them, there would be no distinction between offences such as public indecency, which is a list B offence, and rape, which is a list A offence. Both offences are relevant and serious, which justifies the need to be able to disclose such convictions after they become spent. Having just one list would fail to acknowledge that we are dealing with a spectrum of offences, as was acknowledged by the Law Society of Scotland in its evidence.

Rona Mackay

Are you still of the view that childhood offences that have been committed by care-experienced children should be treated the same as others, or would consideration be given to the external circumstances in such cases?

Gerard Hart

The lists are not an articulation of a wish to treat such cases the same way. The process behind the operation of the lists will allow the unique and individual circumstances of each person who is affected to be considered fully. Disclosure Scotland has been very cognisant of care-experienced young people and their increased propensity to be convicted as children, which is a very serious problem. We work in partnership with Who Cares? Scotland and other organisations, including the CYCJ, on trying to address that.

The lists are probably better seen as a way of saying what is not disclosable. The vast majority of stuff will not be disclosed because it is not on the lists. They kick-start a process whereby a nuanced and individual look is taken at the material so that a proper, fair and balanced decision can be made. There are some young people whose offending will indicate a serious propensity to go on to cause serious harm as adults, but the vast majority of them do not go on to perpetrate such behaviour in adulthood—even those who, in childhood, evince sexually harmful behaviour.

There is no way that we can have a process other than a completely nuanced and qualitative one that would really sift through such information to ensure that we attach disclosure status only to those who genuinely need it and that the vast majority of young people do not have to face the persistent disclosure of their childhood problems.

Rona Mackay

I am concerned about how the detail of that approach will appear in the bill. Will it be worded so as to make it clear that such cases are not viewed in black and white?

Gerard Hart

The guidance that will be produced for our staff in the Scottish Government, the independent reviewer and the police will have, at its very heart, the balance that has to be struck between fairness to the individual and protection of the public. It will have to take full cognisance of the serious and evidence-based concerns that exist about young people who are looked after and accommodated, and the trajectory that they can have in their lives because of the persistence of disclosure requirements. That will be absolutely central to writing good guidance, which we will prepare with stakeholders so that it is as shared as much as possible in both its conception and its operation and is made subject to regular review.

Gemma Grant

On your question about the wording of the bill, I add that a conviction that is non-disclosable because of the operation of the lists cannot be a childhood conviction. A non-disclosable conviction is not disclosable at all, does not go through the decision-making process and is not subject to the statutory tests; it just falls off the disclosure. That is a feature of the bill as it is currently drafted.

Rona Mackay

With regard to the proposed timescales, what general criteria did you use?

10:30  

Kevin Lee (Disclosure Scotland)

The bill does not set out timescales, because we wanted to engage with stakeholders to set appropriate timescales. We do not want to set something that does not give individuals enough time to engage in the process. By the same token, we do not want to set timescales that are too long for organisations from which we might need information, because we obviously want to ensure that the process works as quickly as possible. We are aware that delays could be seen as a proxy for something else that is going on. With our approach, we think that we can deliver the number of applications involved in a matter of days. We are not talking about months, which is how long it takes just now. An application to get a conviction removed from a disclosure by a sheriff can take months, if not over a year. We certainly believe that the approach that we have taken will radically improve the situation for people who want to apply to get information removed from their disclosure.

Rona Mackay

You are confident that it will speed up the process.

Kevin Lee

Yes.

Gail Ross (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)

Good morning. I want to follow up on a point that Gemma Grant made about childhood convictions automatically falling off. Does that mean that they are there but not disclosed, or does it mean that they are permanently deleted and there is no record of their having happened?

Gemma Grant

If somebody had had a conviction in childhood that had become non-disclosable because of the passage of time, it would not be included in any of their disclosure products under the bill. However, I would need to check with my Disclosure Scotland colleagues on the matter of record keeping and whether that information would still be held.

Gerard Hart

We disclose from the police record. Obviously, the police have a criminal history system, the police national computer and other systems that they maintain for the purposes of law enforcement and the apprehension of offenders, from which we disclose. We process that information when we take it from the police and apply the disclosure rules to it.

The police would still hold the information, but they have their own weeding and retention rules, which are commonly referred to as the 20:40:70 proportionality rules; it is the chief constable who applies those. The information that we process is drawn from the police systems. The police would therefore still know about a conviction, unless they had weeded it, but it would not be disclosed by the state on a disclosure.

Gail Ross

Thank you.

I want to move on to what Gemma Grant said earlier about article 8 of the ECHR. Of the system that is proposed in the bill, Alison Reid of Clan Childlaw said in her written submission:

“A system so complex as to mean there is the lack of foreseeability, is at risk of being incompatible with Article 8 of ECHR.”

Furthermore, in a recent letter to the committee, the Faculty of Advocates said that

“the disclosure would ‘represent an unwarranted invasion’ of an individual’s article 8 rights.”

What is your view of that evidence? Is there a genuine concern there?

Gemma Grant

I can certainly confirm that, in order for laws to be compatible with the ECHR, their effects need to be foreseeable. That means that they need to be accessible to the people who are affected by them and must not be arbitrary. If a piece of legislation gives a decision maker discretion, there has to be sufficient clarity about the way in which that discretion will be exercised. What the case law does not say, though, is that decision makers and public bodies are not permitted to have such discretion in making decisions; it is just a question of having a set of parameters that are based on guidance or already known and established legal principles so that the application of those rules is reasonably foreseeable in practice.

The Scottish Government’s position is that what is set out in the existing legislation and in the bill is sufficiently foreseeable, and that that will also be informed by the guidance that is to be developed in consultation with stakeholders.

Gail Ross

Alison Reid commented on that aspect when she gave evidence to the committee. She said:

“We are trying to explain the scheme to young people who potentially have complex mental health issues, who have experienced physical and emotional abuse or trauma or who have been exposed to neglect.”

She said that “really complex concepts” had to be explained. That is possibly at odds with what you said about it being foreseeable. I asked her how we could make things simpler. She said:

“In relation to the way that childhood offending behaviour is addressed, our view is that it should not be treated as a conviction.”—[Official Report, Education and Skills Committee, 9 October 2019; c 8-10.]

Do you have any opinions on that?

Maree Todd

Discussion is absolutely vital to balancing public protection and rights. That is well established in the process of self-disclosure and state disclosure. I will ask Gerard Hart to give the committee more detail on how we intend to engage with stakeholders to ensure that they understand the process clearly and that there is material available on how decisions might be made and how that might impact on people’s future prospects.

Gerard Hart

As the minister said, the concept behind the bill is to try to provide the right tools to ensure that anyone who has a criminal record that could be disclosed can have access to fair and proportionate ways for their case to be looked at on an individual level. There are two poles: we could have a system in which everything is disclosed—that is kind of where we were before the UK Supreme Court ruling in 2014 and our subsequent convention compliance order in 2015—or we could have a system in which nothing is disclosed and everything is protected. There are camps of opinion for both. We are trying to strike the right balance between those two positions and that necessarily drives a degree of discretion into the consideration process.

We have tried to solve that through some of the things that we have talked about today. What we call the rules list and the always list—the lists in schedules 8A and 8B to the Police Act 1997—give a clear articulation of what is never disclosed and what could be disclosed, and the new appeal processes that are being put in place give ready access to justice for people who want those things to be looked at.

The imposition of the independent reviewer across the process adds a new layer of proportionality and fairness, but that brings with it a degree of complexity, because it is a complex problem. We are trying to solve a complex problem that needs an individual and nuanced approach. To counter that, we have to write really great guidance that is fantastically clear so that everyone can understand it. We must do that in partnership with all our stakeholders and have great online services that enable people to access those things easily. We are determined to do that and to have that kind of openness and clarity in the process.

Maree Todd

The Government is confident that the bill will help to deliver a system of disclosure of childhood convictions that is fairer and more individualised, and that it strikes a more proportionate balance between someone’s ability to move on from past behaviour and the need for wider public protection.

One thing that we have not highlighted so far in our evidence is the fact that the bill will enable those with childhood convictions to provide representations that include details about the wider context of their previous behaviour to ministers before any disclosure to a third party is made. That is a significant change from the current system, and I think that it improves proportionality and privacy for individuals who need to use the disclosure system.

Dr Allan

We might have touched on some of what I am about to discuss, but not all of it. I am interested in the context around convictions. Will the bill allow for context to be disclosed, when that is relevant? Can you say a bit more about how context informs decisions about disclosure?

Maree Todd

The decision-making framework where the two tests are applied enables people to consider that context and seek further information to help them to make a decision about whether something needs to be disclosed. As I said, that applies in relation to ORI and, when disclosing information, to ministers or the independent reviewer.

That is where context will be sought, so that people can make a good and informed decision about whether something is relevant and ought to be disclosed. They will have access to suitable context for those decisions to be made.

Dr Allan

Can you say a bit more about the role of ministers in the system and whether you see it increasing or decreasing? Will the proposed system be an improvement on what is there now? How much discretion or involvement are ministers likely to have at any stage in this process on any cases?

Maree Todd

In simple terms, ministers make the first decision on whether something needs to be disclosed; Disclosure Scotland makes that first judgment on behalf of the Scottish ministers. There is then a process of ensuring that the person about whom information is to be disclosed has an opportunity to see that, if they are a child, and to make an appeal to the independent reviewer.

I will ask one of my colleagues to provide some more detail on how the system works.

Dr Allan

I understand that decisions will be made on behalf of ministers, but are there any circumstances in which decisions could end up on the minister’s desk?

Gerard Hart

It has happened. We have consulted ministers. The Carltona principle, which applies across the civil service, means that when we make decisions, we do so on behalf of the minister, as if the minister had made them herself, and she is accountable for those decisions. We obviously have to do that with full cognisance of what that might mean. When there is a particularly difficult matter, it is sometimes right to let the ministers see those cases, and we do that from time to time.

It is also sometimes right to disclose the context of something so that it can be understood by the person who is going to use the information. Running the PVG barring service, from time to time, I might see, for example, a murder case from 30 years ago, the file on which just says, “Murder. Life imprisonment”, and because records have been deleted, we do not know what the details are.

In a curious and helpful way, what we are doing now through the disclosure of information that covers much more than just a bland conviction allows for some of the context around behaviour to be set out so that it will be accessible further on down the line. For example, if an awful murder has been committed, or perhaps a rape and murder, and the circumstances are horrible, at present, that might be disclosed as, “Murder. Glasgow High Court. Life”, whereas, in 30 years’ time, the disclosure might include information about the context of the murder, which will give the person who uses the disclosure a bit more information than they will get at the moment. Focusing more on the task for which the information is being provided will improve public protection.

We have thought through how we can provide context as part of the bill process.

Gemma Grant

As far as the provisions in the bill on providing context are concerned, representations will be at the heart of all the review mechanisms, so individuals will have the opportunity to provide that context themselves. There are also wide information-gathering powers for ministers in exercising their functions under the bill and for the independent reviewer to ask third parties to provide context-specific information.

Dr Allan

On the other side of the equation, which is about education and awareness, do you think that individuals will have the confidence to work out when they are required to self-declare information—for example, when they are applying for a job? Will people continue to be aware of that, or will they need education?

Maree Todd

Education will always be needed for that aspect of self-disclosure. As I said earlier, there is a principle that self-disclosure should synchronise with state disclosure, and we are certainly working to ensure that that is the case through the bill.

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

A couple of times, we have touched on the interaction between the bill and existing legislation and, in particular, the consistency—or lack of consistency—between the self-disclosure and state disclosure regimes. There are probably three pieces of legislation that are relevant here: the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974, the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019, all of which have some contradictions with what is proposed in the bill.

Minister, in your letter and this morning, you have indicated that you intend to lodge amendments to the bill in order to resolve that. Will you give us a bit more detail on those amendments and explain exactly how you intend to resolve the contradictions?

10:45  

Maree Todd

We are still considering that, so I cannot give you any detail today, but I certainly promise to provide details in as timely a manner as possible, so that the committee has time to consider those details before we reach stage 2.

Iain Gray

The matter is quite pressing, because we are at the end of our stage 1 consideration of the bill. When will you be able to show us how you intend to amend the bill?

Kevin Lee

Right now, the self-disclosure regime, which is covered by the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974, and the state disclosure regime, which is governed by the Police Act 1997 and the PVG scheme, are broadly aligned. The real issue is the treatment of childhood convictions, because the bill says that they will be assessed on a case-by-case basis. If we did nothing to the 1974 act as it applies at the moment, the act would compel a person to disclose a conviction from under the age of 18 while it is unspent, yet the bill proposes that the state will take a case-by-case approach. Therefore, we could have a situation in which a person is required to disclose under ROA, but the conviction is not disclosed by the state. The provisions in the bill would be of no use to that person in those circumstances, and that is the issue that we need to fix.

It is a complicated area, because although the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 is not in our policy area, it has necessary connections with what we are doing under the bill. Work is on-going with our justice colleagues to resolve the issue and to prepare amendments, and we will make the committee aware of them at as early a stage as we can.

Iain Gray

The obvious way to fix the inconsistency would be to amend the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974. Are you saying that you do not know whether you will be able to do that?

Kevin Lee

It is our intention to make consequential amendments to the 1974 act.

Iain Gray

You implied that you are still discussing whether you could do so.

Kevin Lee

We are discussing how, not whether, we can do so.

Gerard Hart

We are working to the principle that the systems should be aligned, and if they fail—by which I mean, if there is any ambiguity whatsoever—they should fail on the side of fairness to the individual. We have a number of policy models for how that can be solved, which ministers are considering. The minister will indicate how quickly she intends to address the matter, but we are advanced in our thinking on how to deal with it.

Iain Gray

Minister, you say in your letter that the bill does not amend the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 or the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 because, at that point, neither of the bills had received royal assent, so the acts were not on the statute book. Do you intend to lodge amendments to the bill that will amend those two acts?

Gemma Grant

A number of consequential amendments are required to the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. The disclosure mechanisms that were introduced for under-12s’ behaviour were based on the provisions of the Police Act 1997 being in force, so the 2019 act will require to be updated.

Iain Gray

When will you be able to tell us what those amendments are?

Maree Todd

We will do so as soon as we can.

Iain Gray

That is not much of an answer.

Maree Todd

The Management of Offenders (Scotland) Bill was passed only this year. When I wrote to the committee, the two bills had not been enacted. The acts are very recent pieces of legislation. However, the Government is taking a cohesive approach across the three pieces of legislation to try to solve some of the challenging issues that have taxed and vexed us all for many years. I am actively working on all those issues and I will provide details of the amendments as timeously as I can. I want the committee to understand and be able to scrutinise what we are doing, but I could not provide that detail before the two bills were enacted.

Iain Gray

Will it be before the committee enters stage 2 of the bill proceedings?

Maree Todd

I am keen to make sure that the committee has all the information that it needs before it enters stage 2—yes.

Iain Gray

It probably requires more than being keen, but thanks very much.

Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green)

Let us turn to the minimum age and how under-16s will relate to the scheme. Minister, in your opening remarks, you mentioned the situation in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, where the fact that under-16s do not have to take part in the equivalent schemes seems not to impact on their ability to participate. I am not familiar with the schemes in the rest of the UK. Is that a result of changes that were similar to those that are proposed in the bill? Concerns have been raised about the impact that a change in the system could have in relation to participation. If that has always been the case in the rest of the UK, it is not particularly comparable.

Kevin Lee

They made the change more recently.

Maree Todd

Yes—the change was made more recently, so the situation is similar to the situation here. We are keen not to discourage volunteering among children and young people. They volunteer more than adults do and they contribute a huge amount to Scotland by doing so. We want to make sure that it is still possible for them to do that.

The committee heard evidence from organisations that already consider children differently as volunteers and that do not require them to have PVGs or take on responsibility for performing roles that we would consider to be regulated work. I am confident that we will still be able to provide plenty of opportunities for children to volunteer. I do not think that the change will be as significant as we might imagine, because it has already happened throughout the rest of the UK without great consequence.

Ross Greer

I absolutely agree that organisations submitted evidence that they distinguish between those who are over 16 and those who are under 16. That is best practice, but we cannot make law on the basis of assuming that everyone will follow best practice. There are concerns that the combination of the offence of undertaking a regulated role without appropriate disclosure and the movement to an under-16 system could lead smaller organisations in particular, which are often volunteer led and have less infrastructure, to feel that the safest position to take is not to have under-16s participating in such work. I accept that that is not the intention, but there is concern that that will be the effect.

What problem is being solved by 16 being set as the minimum age? Is it an issue of proportionality?

Maree Todd

I think that it is an issue of privacy for under-16s in that it is not necessary for them to have those things disclosed. Ross Greer has articulated the challenge for us to have really good engagement with stakeholders and produce really good materials in order to ensure that everybody who uses the disclosure system in Scotland is clear about how it operates and what their responsibilities are. We are aware that we need to do a good job on that, and we certainly intend to do so.

As I mentioned, many of the people who gave evidence to the committee talked about the level of engagement with Disclosure Scotland. We are keen to continue to engage intensively with everyone that we need to engage with in order to make sure that the system works at the end of the day.

I ask Gerard Hart to say a little more on that.

Gerard Hart

We have been exploring with stakeholders a number of underpinning issues in relation to that matter. First, we are not saying that under-16s cannot get a disclosure. It is about the fact that joining the PVG scheme means persistent monitoring—every single day—of the person and of the potential for their being considered for listing and being barred if something comes on to their scheme record. Any kid whose behaviour is causing that level of concern should be getting managed under the getting it right for every child framework through all the various aspects that might surround them, such as the police, social work, health and education. There is an expectation that those systems will manage risk and threat for children who might be at risk of having the extreme behaviours that the PVG scheme is there to stop.

The bill provides for children who cannot join the PVG scheme to get what will, in effect, be an enhanced disclosure, so it will still be possible to get a check done. However, because of the protections that I have just mentioned, that should be necessary in only a very small number of cases. The idea is that, in normal circumstances, children ought not to be subjected to that kind of state scrutiny unless there is a really good reason, and even then it should be as an enhanced disclosure or a lower, level 2 disclosure rather than a PVG disclosure.

When they turn 16 or 17 and start to work and be part of the workforce, it will be appropriate for them to join the official regulated roll, but it is not appropriate for them to do so earlier. Stakeholders told us again and again in different contexts that they do not want children who are under 16 to be drawn into the web of state disclosure through the PVG scheme.

Ross Greer

What you have just touched on relates to concerns that have arisen that are underpinned by the idea that the PVG scheme is seen as the be-all and end-all, particularly by smaller organisations that are less familiar with the detail of the system and see the PVG scheme as the only product that is on offer.

I understand how the system would work in relation to the small number of young people who are listed, but there is a larger group of young people whose behaviour might arise. If they are over 16, their behaviour might be disclosed even though they have not reached the threshold for listing. My understanding of what is proposed is that that situation would be managed through the GIRFEC process, but there is concern that that is not perfect. We would all acknowledge that, particularly when young people move between local authorities, situations that are dependent on local authority social work services can create a lot of pressure and people sometimes fall through the cracks. However, given what you have just said, Mr Hart, is that an example of the situations where enhanced disclosure would be the appropriate product?

Gerard Hart

It is everyone’s job to ensure that children and protected adults are safe, which means that the system has to join up across all its different aspects. Disclosure is not a panacea that reduces or limits all risks. We saw in the youth football abuse situation that there has to be a real coming together of different parties in order to make safeguarding work. Disclosure is part of that, but not all of it. We can eliminate risk by having joined-up systems, which is what GIRFEC aims to do. That is the point of the Government’s policy on joining up children’s services and having that focus on the child.

On the sexually harmful behaviours that we are talking about, my experience as a former social worker and former social work inspector with the Social Work Inspection Agency is that the really good services across Scotland that are dealing with such behaviours are joining up on, for example, information exchange and passing on child protection messages and so on. We anticipate that the collective goodness of the system will be sufficient for us to deal with the risks, rather than our having to try to crack a nut with a sledgehammer.

Jenny Gilruth (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)

I want to address some of the technical concerns that Scottish Women’s Aid raised in its written submission, which relate to section 76 of the bill. You might be aware that SWA expressed concern about the proposal

“to redefine the meaning of ‘protected adult’”

because

“This listed vulnerability through ‘disability or illness’”.

It says:

“focussing ... on disability or illness created a loophole, as this definition would not automatically cover women experiencing domestic abuse”.

Has the Government considered that?

Maree Todd

The Scottish Government’s experience of operating the PVG scheme has highlighted challenges with the current definition. The policy intention is to move away from the current lengthy and complex definition to focus on the range of issues that affect a person’s wellbeing, capabilities and capacity and mean that they require additional safeguarding protections. I agree with the stakeholder comments that the simplification and improvement of the clarity of the process must not be to the detriment of the protection of vulnerable groups and that efforts to make the definition easier for users to navigate must be balanced with safeguarding. We are listening carefully to the stakeholders and we will certainly consider how to move forward in the light of their views.

11:00  

Jenny Gilruth

Scottish Women’s Aid also says:

“section 76 limits the protection of the legislation to adults regarded as being vulnerable due to a ‘personal’ condition. This is defined as a mental or physical disability, illness or old age”.

It goes on to say:

“this is a specific issue for ... women experiencing domestic abuse who are accessing refuge accommodation”.

It asks for section 76 to be rewritten to include

“the full spectrum of services within which regulated roles in respect of ‘protected adults’ would exist.”

I appreciate that you said in response to Iain Gray’s question that you are not quite ready to give us the detail, but is the Government actively considering amendments in that area, specifically with regard to women?

Maree Todd

I acknowledge that there is a question around whether the definition of protected adults is appropriately scoped. My officials have met Scottish Women’s Aid to discuss its concerns about the new definition and we are reflecting on any gaps that it might have created. We will certainly consider lodging amendments of the kind that you suggest. As you said, I cannot tell you now exactly what we will do at stage 2, but we are considering our approach.

The Convener

Beatrice, did you want to come in?

Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD)

The issues that I intended to raise in relation to children’s hearings and the long-term consequences have been covered.

The Convener

Ms Harris?

Alison Harris (Central Scotland) (Con)

I am in the same position—most of the issues that I wanted to raise have been covered.

The Convener

Minister, I have a couple of final questions. Thank you for your helpful letter to the committee, in which you say that a formal consultation will be carried out on fees. Will the changes in the bill ensure that organisations do not rely too heavily on the PVG scheme as the be-all and end-all when it comes to decision making?

Maree Todd

The committee has heard from numerous stakeholders. I reiterate my concern that there is sometimes a perception that the PVG scheme is a catch-all and that, as long as a PVG check has been carried out, people will be safe. I think that everyone in this room would be concerned about perpetuating that myth. In my role as Minister for Children and Young People, I make it absolutely clear that there is more to safeguarding than simply PVG checking and that safeguarding children is everyone’s responsibility.

The Convener

I know that you are going to consult on fees, but will you explain how volunteers who move into paid work will be charged under the PVG scheme? Currently, organisations can apply free of charge.

Maree Todd

I ask Gerard Hart to take that question.

Gerard Hart

The policy idea is that people should be able to take ownership of their PVG scheme membership and use it in a way that benefits their career and helps the economy to function even better. That applies in the paid work sector and the volunteering sector. We will need to decide how the fee structure will apply when someone crosses the Rubicon between paid work and voluntary work, and we will address that in the consultation on fees. If we have any proposals on how that will be done, we will engage with stakeholders and carry out user research on how we can make sure that that Rubicon can be crossed with ease. A lot of that will involve digital and online provision and making things easy to access, but the detail is still to be developed, and we will do that with our stakeholders.

The Convener

If somebody who is in a volunteering role becomes paid, how will you ensure that the organisation and the person understand that the move into regular work will mean that a failure to receive a PVG check will become an offence? How will you ensure that that is dealt with proportionately? There is concern about that.

Gerard Hart

When an individual wants to work for an organisation, the safeguarding payload of the scheme lies in us knowing that they are working for that organisation. As part of the registration of the transaction for us to know that the person wants to work for organisation A, the status of the work will have to be disclosed to us. If it is voluntary, there will be no fee, whereas if it is paid work, there will be a fee. It is necessary for us to register the organisation in order to deal with the transaction of giving the disclosure, and a by-product of that is that we will be able to identify whether the transaction should be paid for or free.

Liz Smith

One witness raised a potential anomaly. Given that there is usually one person in an organisation who is responsible for looking after disclosure information and passing it on to the relevant authorities, what would happen if a complaint in relation to the PVG scheme was made about that person?

Gerard Hart

In circumstances in which the countersignatory becomes the subject of consideration for barring, the Scottish Government will write to the person’s employer under section 30 of the current legislation, stating that the person is under consideration for barring. That is not unheard of, but it is very rarely the case that the individual who co-ordinates the disclosure process is at the top—or even close to the top—of the organisation. We would notify their superior in the organisation of their status, which would allow them to take any relevant action to safeguard—

Liz Smith

Will the new legislation cover that?

Gerard Hart

The current legislation covers it.

Liz Smith

I am sorry—I am asking whether the new legislation will cover it.

Gerard Hart

Yes. The existing arrangement will continue in the future. As part of the disclosure process, we vet those people who are logged with us as countersignatories. They have to go through separate checks, which are quite rigorous, to make sure that they are suitable persons to receive disclosure information. That is done as an extra safeguard.

The Convener

That concludes questions from the committee. I thank the minister and her officials for their attendance.

Next week, we will take evidence from the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills on the progress that has been made in relation to the recommendations in the committee’s report on Scottish national standardised assessments, subject choices and the exam diet in 2019.

11:07 Meeting continued in private until 11:19.  

20 November 2019

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4 September 2019

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9 October 2019

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6 November 2019

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13 November 2019

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20 November 2019

Education and Skills Committee's Stage 1 report

What is secondary legislation?

Secondary legislation is sometimes called 'subordinate' or 'delegated' legislation. It can be used to:

  • bring a section or sections of a law that’s already been passed, into force
  • give details of how a law will be applied
  • make changes to the law without a new Act having to be passed

An Act is a Bill that’s been approved by Parliament and given Royal Assent (formally approved).

Delegated Powers and Law Reform committee

This committee looks at the powers of this Bill to allow the Scottish Government or others to create 'secondary legislation' or regulations.

Read the Stage 1 report by the Delegated Powers and Law Reform committee published on 2 October 2019.

Debate on the Bill

A debate for MSPs to discuss what the Bill aims to do and how it'll do it.

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Stage 1 debate on the Bill transcript

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Christine Grahame)

The next item of business is a debate on motion S5M-20452, in the name of Maree Todd, on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill at stage 1.

14:54  

The Minister for Children and Young People (Maree Todd)

I am pleased to open the debate on the general principles of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. I thank everyone who has contributed to developing the bill so far.

The bill is ambitious and touches on complex and diverse matters. Input from private individuals, employers, advocates, regulators and many others has been absolutely invaluable to understanding what they need and what we can achieve with the bill. We have been listening since its introduction. We have listened to the evidence that was given to the Education and Skills Committee and have engaged with more than 700 individuals, including children and young people, through events held by Disclosure Scotland and Volunteer Scotland. We have worked hard throughout to discover how we can make state disclosure work better for everyone.

I know that the proposals in the bill represent a significant change. To get all the benefits of the changes, we will need to maintain that engagement as we work towards implementation. I believe that the evidence that was given to the committee reflects the level of constructive cross-sector engagement that there has already been with a view to getting the bill right.

I also thank the members of the Education and Skills Committee for their considered approach to stage 1. In particular, I welcome the committee’s support for the general principles of the bill. I have taken time to consider its recommendations, and I am just as committed as it has been in providing a constructive response.

In recent years, the Scottish Government has worked to improve the justice, rehabilitation and disclosure systems. The Disclosure (Scotland) Bill is the next step in ensuring that we can continue to support safeguarding Scotland’s most vulnerable people while recognising the right of people to move on from their past behaviour. It is in that context that I am considering the committee’s recommendations.

The bill introduces new and reformed processes to allow certain information that could be disclosed to be fairly assessed. The current system provides only limited opportunity for people to challenge what is included in their disclosure. The reforms will ensure that people can interact with the disclosure process and expect it to take account of their circumstances. That does not mean that we will stop disclosing information that is relevant to safeguarding; it simply means that our disclosure system will be better able to take into account the individual circumstances surrounding offending behaviour.

That is particularly important when considering childhood offending. The bill will afford new protections to people who, as children, came into contact with the justice and hearings systems. The provisions allow the full context of childhood behaviour to be considered before a decision is made about whether to disclose such information to a third party.

I welcome the committee’s recognition of the particular needs of care-experienced people and our duty to listen carefully to their voices in developing policy. In evidence, we heard from Robert Dorrian, a care-experienced young person who described how a childhood conviction, for which he was admonished, followed him through his education and limited his opportunities as a young adult. That must change. It is vital that people who have experienced adversities in childhood are not further held back as they try to move on as adults.

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

The minister’s point about how such incidents can affect future chances is very well made. However, a concern was raised about whether sufficient consideration had been given to whether information on such behaviour might be disclosed as other relevant information, even though it would not be disclosed as a childhood offence. What consideration has been given to that concern?

Maree Todd

We have given a great deal of consideration to the committee’s concerns about the disclosure of other relevant information, or ORI. I assure Mr Johnson that we are not planning to change the process of disclosure—how we make those decisions. What we are planning to do is to communicate better how those decisions are made.

We also seek to reform the process by which some spent convictions can be removed from a higher-level disclosure. There are many sensitive roles for which it is accepted and proportionate that convictions that would otherwise be forgotten still get disclosed. That allows employers to properly consider past conduct before putting someone into a position of responsibility. The Supreme Court has accepted that it is appropriate for us to set out clear thresholds regarding offence type and severity. Having lists and criteria against which disclosure happens enables a proportionate and foreseeable system that can be delivered within reasonable operational limits.

Currently, removing convictions requires a summary application to the sheriff. We have been told that the process is time consuming, expensive and intimidating for potential applicants. The bill will change that, and the new first step will be to make a simple review request to Disclosure Scotland. If Disclosure Scotland decides that the information should be included, the applicant can opt for independent review. I recognise and accept the committee’s position that allowing subsequent reviews of the same information at a later date would enhance proportionality. That means that a state decision to include a conviction could be changed later as time passes or circumstances change. I will therefore lodge a stage 2 amendment to that effect for the committee’s consideration.

As I said, I know that concerns have been raised surrounding ORI and the bill. It is important to remember that the provision of ORI is not something new that is being introduced by the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. Inquiries following the Dunblane massacre in 1996 and the Soham murders in 2002 highlighted that we needed to better manage information about individuals about whom there are valid safeguarding concerns.

Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

I entirely agree with the minister about the sensitivities over the issue—what she has just said is absolutely right.

One issue that was put to the committee is that sometimes we end up with a situation in which the person who has information disclosed about them is not able to see the full extent of the information that goes to the employer or a reviewer. Does the minister have any concerns about that?

Maree Todd

The bill proposes that an individual who requests a disclosure certificate will see the information about them that is to be disclosed before the employer does, and they will have the opportunity to have that information reviewed by the independent reviewer. It is planned that the independent reviewer will give some feedback on the decision, so the person who is applying for the disclosure certificate will be significantly better informed under the new system than they were under the old system

ORI has a vital role in safeguarding, and continuing with that approach is necessary for public protection. I am confident that Police Scotland and other United Kingdom police forces exercise the utmost rigour before deciding to include ORI. The purpose of the name changes that we are making is to mirror the arrangements that exist in the rest of the UK, which means that people will have the opportunity to dispute ORI’s inclusion before a potential employer receives it and will have a right of review by the independent reviewer. Statutory guidance on deciding whether to include ORI will also be issued to the chief constable. The changes will ensure that the information that may be included is more foreseeable, without diminishing the capability to share relevant information.

The committee has recommended that we include in the bill

“guiding principles ... which should apply to all decision making”.

Although the existing parameters have a very strong basis in the relevant case law, I accept the case for including more detail in the bill to assist with foreseeability and clarity. I am carefully considering the recommendations and how best to include those principles, but it is important that they do not compromise the flexible approach that is necessary in fully considering each individual’s circumstances.

I also recognise the concerns around how the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill will interact with the rules on self-disclosure in relation to childhood convictions. There are a number of challenges in ensuring that we get the balance between safeguarding and proportionality right. At stage 2, I will lodge amendments to ensure that no one will have to self-disclose a childhood conviction that would not be disclosed by the state.

The Scottish Government’s experience of operating the protection of vulnerable groups scheme since its introduction has highlighted the challenges in identifying eligibility for that scheme. The past eight years have demonstrated that the term “regulated work” is poorly understood and overly complex. The bill seeks to address those concerns. Discussions with stakeholders on the definition of “regulated work” indicated that many felt that it needed to be much clearer. It was also evident that, to ensure a robust PVG system, the definition of “regulated work” needed to go further and to include those who have the ability to exercise power or influence over vulnerable groups.

We have consulted on which day-to-day activities result in power or influence over vulnerable groups. Those activities and the definition of “contact” are set out in schedules 3 and 4 to the bill. Many stakeholders have told us that the new schedules offer more clarity, but I am conscious that clear and accessible guidance will be required to support them fully. We are committed to working with stakeholders, including smaller businesses and voluntary organisations, in developing the guidance.

I have noted the concerns that were raised by Scottish Women’s Aid and the committee regarding the proposed change to the definition of “protected adult”. The intention was to move away from the current lengthy and complex definition to focus on the range of issues that affect a person’s wellbeing, capabilities and capacity. However, I recognise that, in doing so, some of the nuance in relation to those who are vulnerable due to their circumstances may have been lost. I thank Scottish Women’s Aid for highlighting that issue, and I will lodge a stage 2 amendment to ensure that such people remain within scope.

The bill is founded on extensive and on-going engagement with a broad range of stakeholders. We have listened carefully to diverse voices from across Scotland at each stage of the bill’s development, and we look forward to continuing that approach as we progress. If there is one message that I ask members to take into the debate, it is that I am listening and I will consider carefully what more might need to be done. I acknowledge that we may have different views on the best way to make progress on some aspects of this innovative bill, and I welcome the constructive discussion that we have had so far. I commit to working together with stakeholders and with members of the committee and the wider Parliament to ensure that we get the bill right for our communities, for vulnerable groups, for businesses and for charities in Scotland.

I look forward to the debate and to hearing more views from members across the chamber.

I move,

That the Parliament agrees to the general principles of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

I call Clare Adamson to speak on behalf of the Education and Skills Committee.

15:07  

Clare Adamson (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)

As the convener of the Education and Skills Committee, I thank the committee members and the clerking team for their support during the stage 1 deliberations on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. The bill has the potential to be transformative for some people who find themselves in the disclosure system.

I was pleased that the minister mentioned Robert Dorrian. It is important that members understand fully the impact that the bill may have on young people such as Robert, so I will quote him. He said:

“I have experience of the disclosure process. I accrued an admonishment when I was 16. I have a very real interest in the bill, because it can effect change. There is a lot of conversation to be had about the intention behind the bill. My journey has been made more difficult than it had to be. Throughout my time, I have lost out on lucrative jobs, been passed over for consideration and have had to have more than one awkward conversation. That could and should have been avoided. Had the recommendations in the bill been enacted years ago, I might be in a different position from the one that I am in today.”—[Official Report, Education and Skills Committee, 13 November 2019; c 5.]

Those words highlight that it is vital that the bill is fit for purpose and works for everybody who interacts with the disclosure scheme.

That said, it is a complex and technical bill. As the convener of the committee that was charged with scrutinising it at stage 1, I believe that the evidence that we heard provided us with encouragement about the positive aspects of the bill but highlighted areas where the committee believes that further work is needed to ensure that the bill has optimal impact. I will try to cover those areas in my speech.

Before I do so, I thank all those who gave evidence to the committee, whether as part of our focus groups on the bill, by providing written submissions or by attending the committee to give oral testimony at evidence sessions. As we did in our report on the bill, I acknowledge the Government’s extensive engagement before drafting the bill. We heard from a wide range of witnesses, including many smaller voluntary groups and charities that interact regularly with the disclosure scheme. The lived experience of those giving evidence was particularly helpful in illuminating for the committee the potential practical challenges and opportunities in the bill as drafted.

I also thank the bill team from Disclosure Scotland, whose detailed pre-introduction consultation and constructive co-operation with the committee throughout stage 1 was very much appreciated. I welcome the Scottish Government’s constructive and detailed response to our stage 1 report, which was received on Tuesday.

I will focus my comments on some of the recommendations in our stage 1 report. I will not have time to pick up on everything in the report, but hopefully I will give colleagues some food for thought ahead of stage 2, when we expect to consider amendments on a range of the bill’s provisions.

I mentioned that some people view the bill as complex and technical, and that is certainly the case in relation to its interaction with other pieces of legislation. We were very concerned by some of the discrepancies between the bill as drafted and related acts that have been recently passed by the Parliament, such as the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019.

In our stage 1 report, we asked the Scottish Government to address those discrepancies at stage 2, and I note that the Government committed to doing so in its response. I welcome the Scottish Government’s reassurance that the bill was drafted with the principles of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in mind, which was another concern raised by the committee.

Another challenge that was addressed by the committee is the two-part test in relation to level 2 disclosures. The two-part test concerns whether the information ought to be included in the disclosure and whether it is relevant for the purpose of disclosure. We heard from a number of witnesses, including the Law Society of Scotland, who felt that further clarity was needed on the operation of those tests, particularly in relation to childhood convictions and the disclosure of other relevant information. Daniel Johnson has already raised that issue this afternoon.

In our report, we welcomed the Scottish Government’s commitment to develop guidance in collaboration with stakeholders, but we recommended that the Scottish Government consider the suggestion from the Law Society of Scotland that a set of guiding principles or criteria be included in the bill. I am encouraged by the fact that the Scottish Government has stated in its response to our report that an appropriate stage 2 amendment will be lodged on that issue.

As members can infer from the testimony of Robert Dorrian, the bill seeks to reform how offences that are committed by young people aged between 12 and 17 are disclosed. The policy memorandum to the bill states that one of the policy goals of the bill is

“recognising adolescence as a unique phase of life by ending the automatic disclosure of convictions accrued while aged between 12 and 17 years and introducing an assessment by Disclosure Scotland acting on behalf of Ministers as to whether convictions ought to be disclosed”.

That goal was welcomed by a number of witnesses, but I will focus, in particular, on people such as Robert Dorrian, who are care experienced. Who Cares? Scotland told the committee that,

“although those who have been in care make up an estimated 0.5% of the population, they make up 33% of Scotland’s youth offender population and 31% of Scottish adult prison populations”,

which makes them much more likely to be impacted by decisions that are taken about the disclosure scheme.

I have spoken about the potential to provide the context for offences. On that issue, our report stated that more could be done to provide opportunities for any information related to childhood offences that is included in a disclosure to be set in context. That is particularly important for care-experienced people, given their disproportionate level of engagement with the justice system. We hope that that is at the forefront of everybody’s minds as the bill progresses.

The disclosure scheme is also about enabling individuals to take on roles in which they can work with vulnerable groups. One concern that the committee holds is over the current proposal to prevent under-16s from obtaining PVG scheme membership. Sarah Latto of the Scottish Volunteering Forum told us that,

“given that there is also the proposal to make being a PVG scheme member mandatory for doing regulated roles, a lot of organisations would interpret that as meaning that people under the age of 16 would no longer be able to do any voluntary work with vulnerable groups. We think that that would be a real shame and that it would not reflect current circumstances and roles that young volunteers fulfil.”

In our report, we recommend that the Scottish Government conduct a review of the change to measure any negative impact on volunteering rates among young people, as well as developing guidance and supporting organisations to continue to offer volunteering opportunities to those under the age of 16.

Finally, the committee considered the financial memorandum to the bill—in particular, the fee structure for those applying for disclosure products. We recommended the waiving of fees for volunteers obtaining any disclosure product, not just PVG scheme membership. The Scottish Government has committed to a wide-ranging consultation on fees, which I am sure we will all follow with interest.

It would be remiss of me not to mention the recent section 22 report on Disclosure Scotland’s information technology system. The committee has exchanged letters with the bill team to obtain assurances that the findings of the report will not affect the bill’s financial memorandum.

The committee considered other areas that I am sure will be picked up elsewhere in the debate, such as the use of other relevant information and the change from regulated work to regulated roles. However, as I am rapidly running out of time—

The Deputy Presiding Officer

No, no—you can have a bit of extra time if you need it. I saw you looking anxiously at the clock, but we have a little time in hand.

Clare Adamson

I will conclude by reiterating that the committee supports the general principles of the bill. However, we believe that there are several areas of the bill that will require further clarification and consideration at stage 2 to ensure that the bill delivers on its aims in full. We look forward to considering amendments at stage 2 to strengthen this vital component of our protection of vulnerable groups.

I repeat my thanks to the many organisations that engaged with the Government’s consultation and the committee. Their input has got us to the position of having a robust stage 1 report. I look forward to hearing the rest of this afternoon’s debate and, in particular, how we might progress at stage 2.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

There is a little time in hand, so I will not be too restrictive on timing—within limits.

15:17  

Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

I put on record the fact that I hold a current PVG certificate.

The Disclosure (Scotland) Bill was introduced in Parliament on 12 June 2019, and it is clear that its general principles are warmly welcomed. I have heard of no concerns among stakeholders that the bill should not be happening. Indeed, it is a very bold move by the Scottish Government to try to improve and work through the complexities of the system, with all the sensitivities that go with it. Generally speaking, it is a good move. That said, the more that we look into the matter, the more complexities appear. I am not yet convinced that we have a way through some of the considerable problems, which I will come to in a minute.

The general approach of simplicity is warmly welcomed. The move away from the four different classifications that we currently have has been warmly welcomed by all the stakeholders, and the Scottish Government is right to try to address that problem. We also warmly welcome the progress towards a more digital system, which, in theory, will be more like the non-paper-based environment that we all live in today.

The minister mentioned that there is a need to recognise adolescence as a particular phase in someone’s life. I am sure that we would all agree with that. It is both important and appropriate that common sense can be applied to judgments should someone have fallen foul of the law in the past, whether they went through the justice system or the children’s hearings system.

I will address some of the fundamental problems of the bill as it stands, which I see not as party-political issues but as practical discrepancies that have been raised consistently by stakeholders—the Law Society of Scotland, Children in Scotland and Recruit with Conviction, to name but a few—throughout the past several months of evidence.

If we allow the bill to proceed beyond stage 1, as I believe we should, it is the Scottish Conservatives’ recommendation that some fundamental changes be made to avoid further complicating an already complicated landscape on what is often a sensitive issue. The committee’s report captures those concerns, and we welcome the general thrust of the comments that Clare Adamson just made.

Although a central theme of the bill is simplicity, the Scottish Government must state clearly how the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill will fit in with other primary legislation and statutory instruments. For example—this has been highlighted several times by various stakeholders—the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2018 directs self-disclosure and the provision for under-18s is based on the date of conviction. The Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, however, contains provisions for state disclosure and includes provisions for a date of offence. Members will see immediately how that might have unintended consequences and cause legislative conflict. It is important that much greater thought is given to the necessary coherence of different pieces of legislation.

Maree Todd

Since the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 was developed, the period of disclosure has always been set from the date of conviction and based on the disposals upon conviction. That is the most straightforward approach to take. In the period between offence and conviction, there is nothing to protect an individual from, because they are not yet carrying the status of a person with a conviction.

We decided to take a different approach, following the model in the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. Doing that will ensure that we deliver on our commitment to treat childhood offending as being different from adult offending behaviour. So, in the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, as in the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019, we are using the date of offence.

The presumption that is provided for in section 41 of the bill is there to deal with borderline cases in which the behaviour was committed under the age of 18 but the conviction occurred after the individual had turned 18. I hope that that reassures the member that we have considered that complexity and made the appropriate choices.

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Linda Fabiani)

That was a long intervention. I can give you extra time, Ms Smith.

Liz Smith

That is a welcome clarification, and I fully understand the rationale behind what the minister has just said. It is encouraging that that has been considered. Nonetheless, we know what happens when there is a discrepancy in the language that is used in legislation and in different statutory instruments, and when a different interpretation is put on things. Therefore, it would be helpful if we could have some clarity on that point in the guidance.

The Professional Standards Authority is responsible for the accredited registers programme, which accredits the voluntary registers of practitioners who are not regulated by law, and it has made the same point about the need for coherence, particularly in relation to groups of volunteers that are not governed by a particular professional code of conduct. There are issues there, particularly if we want to encourage more volunteers to come into the process. It is an area that we need to consider at stage 2.

The Government has, quite properly, acknowledged that there are issues about coherence. It is a difficult situation, because the bill falls between portfolios. The Parliament has often been challenged on that, and we know what happens if we pass bad legislation and end up having to undo a lot of good things. It is, therefore, worth spending a lot of time on getting the bill right at stage 2, so that there is consistency.

There is perhaps an issue with the timescale for stage 2, which I understand is just a couple of weeks away. That is quite a short time in which to deal with some of the issues. The minister might like to think about that.

The most difficult issue, however, is legal as opposed to legislative. At the committee’s evidence session on 20 November, I asked the Minister for Children and Young People about the nature of the two disclosure tests—the “relevant” and the “ought to be disclosed” tests—because, as yet, I do not think there is enough clarity regarding the criteria that are to be used by decision makers. I know that other members—I think that Daniel Johnson is one of them—share that concern.

In line with what the Law Society of Scotland and the Howard League have advised, it is surely essential that there is clear guidance that is firmly rooted in the law and the foreseeability of outcomes. Members know only too well what happens when that is not the case. As things stand, the decision-making provisions in the bill remain quite complex, and there are a lot of issues with them that we must tie up before we move to stage 2.

How much longer do I have, Presiding Officer?

The Deputy Presiding Officer

I can quite happily give you another minute or so.

Liz Smith

Thank you. These are important points.

I turn to volunteering, which my colleague Brian Whittle will focus on. The purpose of the bill must be about trust in the system. We must ensure that, when parents take a youngster to scouts, a sports group, a Duke of Edinburgh award group or whatever it might be, there is absolute trust not just in the integrity and probity of the person who is in charge and will be looking after the group but in the system that backs them up. That is absolutely crucial. We must ensure that we have a lot of volunteers, because communities depend on the strength of volunteers. The argument about what is defined as “regulated work” as opposed to “regulated roles” is therefore very important, and I am thinking about stage 2 amendments that might clarify some of that.

Sometimes in Parliament we are presented with a bill that deals with what looks like, in theory, a very straightforward issue but that, in practice, turns out to be incredibly difficult. I think that this is one of those bills, and I think that the minister thinks that, too. We must be united as a Parliament to overcome all the practical difficulties. The committee has made a good start on that and the minister’s comments reflect that, but I do not think that it is going to be an easy bill. It is quite a challenging situation.

15:27  

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

I am pleased to join the welcome in the chamber for the bill, following the committee’s report. As members from other parties in the chamber will, my Labour colleagues and I will support the general principles of the bill.

It is worth spending a little time on the context of the bill. Last year, we celebrated the 20th anniversary of this Parliament, and there was a fair bit of debate about what has been the biggest, boldest or most controversial legislation that we have passed. Actually, a lot of what we have done has been consensual and has been passed quietly but with great care, and a lot of it has been about protecting people, especially children and vulnerable people—although Liz Smith was right to say that such legislation can be complex, even though it is consensual.

The first non-emergency act that the Scottish Parliament passed did just that. The Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000, which I had the privilege of taking through Parliament with the Minister for Justice, Jim Wallace—happy days indeed—took incapacity legislation, some of which was centuries old, and replaced it with what was, at the time, the most modern legislation of the type in Europe. It was exactly designed to protect people who are rendered vulnerable by disability, illness or age.

The 2000 act has been notable for two things. First, it created a system that is unique to Scotland and Scottish needs, and secondly, although it is not often acknowledged in commemorations of our work, it has, in the intervening years, been used by almost every family in the country. Sometimes the quietest legislation is the most effective.

Disclosure is a bit like that. Over the years, we have taken the legislation that we inherited—the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 and the Police Act 1997—and built on it through the creation of Disclosure Scotland, the Protection of Vulnerable Groups Acts 2007 and various amendments to ensure compliance with human rights. We have worked, as a Parliament, quietly and without fanfare over time, to ensure that Scotland has the right processes to protect Scotland’s people. It is simply the next stage in that that brings us here today. Like the Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000, these quiet legislative waters run deep.

The committee heard in evidence from Disclosure Scotland that the PVG scheme now has 1.2 million members. Therefore—this is especially the case for members of the committee—any time that we feel that this is all a bit dry, technical and complex, we need to remind ourselves of how important the system is in protection of vulnerable people in their contact with adults, in both professional and voluntary capacities, through every imaginable aspect of life and society.

As for the consequences of getting that wrong and the system failing, we need only to look across this city to the historical child abuse inquiry to hear exactly what happens when we fail to protect children and other vulnerable groups, and just how much hurt and suffering ensues. Those are not bad things that happened somewhere else—somewhere dangerous. They happened right here in Scotland, and in the very places that were supposed to be places of safety. That is a constant reminder that it is so important that we get the legislation right.

It is no wonder that a bill to modernise child protection laws and to strengthen protections for vulnerable adults has been welcomed—as members have said already—by a broad range of organisations that responded to the consultation and provided evidence to the committee.

As the convener has said, the committee supported the general principles of the bill, but said that

“there are a number of areas within the bill which will require further clarification and consideration”.

The question how the bill will interact with other legislation is crucial—in particular, acts that have recently been passed by the Scottish Parliament, including the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. We still await answers to that question that will tell us, in detail, how the bill will do that. I think that the minister has, however, made a welcome commitment to lodge amendments at stage 2.

Labour will seek a commitment from the minister to publish an analysis of interactions with other legislation before the bill is enacted—assuming that it is passed into law. Ministers should also look again at the evidence that was provided to the committee, to ensure that the right balance is struck between protecting vulnerable groups, providing information for appointments to sensitive roles, respecting individuals’ rights to privacy, and allowing individuals to move on from offending behaviour. Sometimes the relationships between those things are difficult.

That is why we think—my colleague Daniel Johnson will say more about this—that consideration should be given to there being greater clarity about the principles that are to be applied. Again, I welcome what we heard from the minister earlier about that, although clearly we will have to see the detail on how she intends to try to deliver it.

It is also important that the bill ensures that the proposed changes to the system are user-friendly for organisations and for individuals, but it is clear from the evidence that we received that some work is still to be done. The disclosure system has to be easy to understand—in particular, the relationship between regulated work and regulated roles. As Liz Smith said, that was a clear theme in evidence to the committee.

At stage 2, I would like the committee to examine regulated roles further, so that organisations such as Shared Lives Plus, which supports adult carers, could be given parity with foster carers who care for children.

Next week will see the launch of the care review. Once the bill has been passed—as, I am sure, it will—we urge the Scottish Government to review the impact of the legislation on people who are care experienced. The committee convener spoke about one piece of evidence that we received, but we also heard other evidence about various aspects of the legislation and how they might have particular and disproportionate impacts on care-experienced young people who are building their lives and futures.

All that will be in the detail of the next stage, after 20 years of quietly but effectively improving protection of vulnerable Scots. We are sure that the bill will do that too, so the principle is certainly one that we will support this evening.

15:34  

Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green)

As a PVG scheme member, I found the stage 1 process interesting. Robust and efficient safeguarding procedures are essential for protection of vulnerable groups in our society, but those procedures will never be simple. A balance needs to be struck to ensure that vulnerable people are protected, while the rights—in particular, the right to privacy—of people who work with them are also protected to the greatest extent possible.

That is especially true when those are not two separate groups—when a person who is considered to be vulnerable, perhaps by dint of their age, wishes to take on a role that engages with other vulnerable individuals. That has been a consistent theme in the Education and Skills Committee’s consideration of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, so I will come back to it in a moment.

The interaction of the bill with the wider agenda of restorative justice, in particular in recently passed legislation, is complex, as Liz Smith outlined. It is neither just nor sustainable that everyone who has a past offence be branded for life, but clearly we need a system in which people who present a risk to vulnerable groups are not permitted to work with them.

The aims of the bill are sound and will have the unanimous support of Parliament. As a PVG scheme member, I welcome the bill’s intention to strengthen and simplify the system. For example, the proposals to introduce regulated roles should lead to clearer understanding of where PVG membership is required. There has, in the past, been confusion about whether certain roles and work require disclosure, so the examples that are associated with the bill are helpful.

The reduction to two tiers of disclosure should also simplify the system and ensure that only convictions for which there is a genuine need for disclosure must be revealed. That is a sensitive area of law in which it can be difficult to get the balance right and in which case law plays a key role. The bill seeks to incorporate new provisions that are derived from recent case law from both the UK Supreme Court and the Scottish Court of Session.

In scrutinising the bill, the Education and Skills Committee heard evidence from a range of stakeholders, including organisations that work with vulnerable groups and with ex-offenders. Feedback from those organisations was not unanimous in respect of views on some of the proposals—for example, setting a new minimum age of 16 for PVG scheme membership—but their contributions were extremely helpful and showed broad support for the aims and principles of the bill. A broad range of specific concerns were raised; I expect the Government to address them, as appropriate, during stage 2 or through implementation of the legislation, once it has been passed.

A particular concern that I share with those stakeholders, and which I pursued throughout our evidence gathering, is about the proposal to remove under-16s from the PVG scheme. The rationale behind that is that the very small number of under-16s who are barred from working with vulnerable groups should already be known to the system, and that it is therefore disproportionate to monitor continuously a few thousand under-16s as PVG scheme members. I accept that rationale, but in combination with the offence of engaging in restricted work without having gone through a disclosure process, that creates an anomalous and potentially confusing situation in which under-16s could engage in what would otherwise be considered to be restricted work but which, by dint of their age, is not treated as such.

I accept that under-16s should not undertake that kind of work unsupervised and that an adult with PVG membership should be present, but the concern is about unintended consequences—namely, that the participation of under-16s in volunteering will be depressed by a perception that their ineligibility for PVG membership means that they are also ineligible for the volunteering work. Organisations might adopt a policy of requiring all workers and volunteers to be PVG members, as would be implied by the law, without consideration for how that would affect volunteers who are under the age of 16.

There are, of course, other Disclosure Scotland products, but that is where communication is key. We are talking about small voluntary groups, not professionals. In addition, I believe that vulnerability is being created because other imperfect services, including social work and the police, are being relied on to ensure that the small number of under-16s who are a risk and are barred from engaging with vulnerable groups are prevented from doing so.

My specific concern is about a situation in which one such young person moves between local authority areas. In that scenario, communication between the public agencies that most commonly engage with them breaks down, even if just for a short time. I accept that the risk of that happening is small, but there was a thoroughness in the previous system, which encompassed under-16s, that will potentially be lost.

The committee struggled with those issues. We did not conclude that the proposal is inappropriate and needs to be changed, but the concerns that were raised were compelling enough to lead us to recommend that the Government review participation of under-16s in voluntary work, following an initial period of operation of the new disclosure system. I would appreciate a commitment from the minister that such a review—a reasonable request—will take place.

The other area that I have spent the most time on concerns the new powers for Disclosure Scotland. A two-part test is to be introduced that Disclosure Scotland will exercise in situations relating to level 2 disclosures. A number of factors are to be taken into account during a level 2 disclosure to determine whether it would be proportionate. However, the bill lacks a clear framework or guiding principles for decisions, which means that a substantial part of the new system—procedures that directly impact on the balance between safeguarding and privacy and rehabilitation—were not available for scrutiny at stage 1.

I appreciate that the Government has committed to working with stakeholders to develop a framework for decision making, but it is bad practice for Parliament to pass legislation when substantive supporting documents including guidance have not been available for scrutiny alongside the bill. That is necessary sometimes, but I fail to see why it is the case in this situation. Overreliance on secondary legislation or non-statutory guidance means that Parliament simply does not have the same opportunity to ensure that legislation is fit for purpose.

I ask the minister to provide further clarity on the points that are raised in the committee’s stage 1 report that I have repeated, and I give the Greens’ support for the principles of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill.

15:41  

Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD)

The process of disclosure rests on the ability to have both consistency and discretion so that the system is able to ensure both fairness and protection. I agree with what was said about a case against the Metropolitan Police Service:

“The proportionality of the disclosure will inevitably require balancing the rights of individuals with the potential risk to members of society ... this balancing act is ‘of the greatest public importance’.”

Putting that into legislation is obviously a delicate and complex process. The Disclosure (Scotland) Bill is the first piece of legislation that I have had the opportunity to scrutinise since being elected to the Scottish Parliament, and I am glad to begin with such an important bill.

Legislative simplification is clearly necessary. Having patchwork legislation makes life harder for practitioners and for the people who work or live under the system. The disclosure process is useful only if it is effective and it is effective only if it can be understood. I support what Scottish Women’s Aid said, which is that simplification is

“welcome but only where this allows the same, or improved, levels of disclosure, coverage and protection for vulnerable people and does not inadvertently create loopholes capable of exploitation.”

Evidence heard by the committee about inconsistencies between this bill and others that have been passed by the Scottish Parliament in the same session was, therefore, concerning. Debbie Nolan, of the Centre for Youth and Criminal Justice, noted in committee that

“if those three pieces of legislation are not fully aligned, we run the risk of the benefits not being realised”.—[Official Report, Education and Skills Committee, 13 November 2019; c 6.]

If the Government cannot produce consistency across legislation produced in the same year, an expectation of consistent decision making by practitioners will already have been undermined.

I also note the need to create a regime that is able to stand the test of time. Other parts of the reforms were passed last year under the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. The Government’s response to new calls from the international human rights community and to amendments from my party mean that the new age of criminal responsibility already lags behind international expectations. Social Work Scotland said:

“It is critical that Scottish Government and its agencies have a coherent and comprehensive understanding of how all these parts piece together, with systems in place for managing risks, tensions and overlaps.”

I would be grateful to hear the minister’s understanding of how that would be ensured should this Parliament step up to the plate and raise the age of criminal responsibility in the future.

The relationship between employment and a criminal record is complicated, but the potential for rehabilitation that meaningful work can offer must be recognised. Although a job in itself might not trigger desistance, the stability and responsibility that it creates may actively stop a person tending towards reoffending. Research conducted last year by Beth Weaver of the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research and the University of Strathclyde found that

“barriers to work engendered by attitudes towards people with convictions and disclosure of criminal histories may destabilise efforts to desist and cut off opportunities to sustain desistance, thus ironically undermining public protection.”

An overly restrictive disclosure regime is therefore in nobody’s interest.

In a similar vein, I would be grateful for reassurance that the safeguards that will be put in place to ensure that the new offence for those who fail to secure PVG scheme membership will not be used as a heavy-handed response to bad administration. A sentence of 12 months in custody may be appropriate where there is a deliberate intention to circumvent the scheme and to target vulnerable people, but I am not convinced that that is a proportionate response to other circumstances to which it might apply, such as what Community Justice Scotland called “a lapse in paperwork”.

There have already been reports of delays to PVG scheme membership applications at Disclosure Scotland as a result of hiccups with the new information and communications technology system. The Scottish Government has responded in part to concerns, but I would be grateful for further reassurances about IT capacity in light of 1.2 million people perhaps needing to reapply for PVG scheme membership as the renewal system gets under way.

Overall, although I do not think that it is quite ready yet, the bill has the potential to make genuine, positive changes to the disclosure process. I confirm that the Scottish Liberal Democrats support its principles.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

That concludes the opening speeches. We move to the open debate. Speeches should be about six minutes, please. I have a little bit of time in hand for interventions.

15:46  

Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)

I am happy to speak in this stage 1 debate. I consider it necessary to introduce the bill at this time. Perhaps the best way to explain why is by quoting the purpose of the bill from the policy memorandum:

“The provisions of this Bill will deliver a range of positive and proportionate reforms to the disclosure regime in Scotland whilst also strengthening the barring service to maintain the Scottish Government’s ability to protect the most vulnerable in society.”

In essence, the bill is being introduced to modernise and improve proportionality in the disclosure system. It aims to balance public protection with the right to move on from past offences. It is split into two parts. Part 1

“creates the legislative framework for the new disclosure products for criminal history and other information”

and part 2

“makes a number of amendments and insertions into the PVG Act.”

As we have heard, the bill is complex. Amendments will be required at stage 2 to achieve the desired purpose of making the disclosure scheme less complex. The current legislation provides for 10 disclosure products, which stakeholders find confusing, and the system is mainly paper based. The bill contains proposals to allow ministers to offer stakeholders online services that are not possible under the existing legislation, while recognising that online access will not work for everyone and alternatives will be offered.

The number of disclosure products will decrease, reducing confusion, and improved digital services will guide employers and applicants to the right level of disclosure.

Crucially, as we have heard, the bill will give individuals greater control over their disclosure data. They will decide whether disclosure information will be released to a third party, without eroding the vital safeguarding role of disclosure. That is especially important for childhood convictions, when offences were accrued while under the age of 18. Those will no longer be automatically disclosed. They will be eligible for independent review, which, if successful, will allow the young person to move on without being hampered by a childhood offence. That aspect is probably best illustrated by the quote that the convener cited from Robert Dorrian of Who Cares? Scotland, a witness to the committee, who was also mentioned by the minister.

As the convener Clare Adamson, and Liz Smith, Iain Gray and others have said, the committee was concerned about the impact and interaction of the bill with the recently passed Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019, along with the proposed legislation incorporating the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

The Government has noted that and the minister addressed the issue in her response to Liz Smith. As I said, the Government will lodge amendments at stage 2 to remedy the matter. I am also pleased with the reassurance that the drafting of the bill took account of the UNCRC.

The committee welcomed the role of the independent reviewer, but was keen that support services would be in place by the time the bill came into force, which the Government has agreed with. The Government has also agreed that draft guidelines for the two-part test must be provided and that training must be part of that and be widely consulted on.

We were also concerned that an unsuccessful review of a list A offence cannot be reviewed for the same purpose twice, which could result in a lifetime of disclosure for the individual.

There was some confusion about how the review processes would work and how individuals could engage with the process. Those issues must be addressed. The Government has committed to considering a set of guiding principles in that regard, and the minister has outlined the situation in relation to reviews.

As Daniel Johnson and Liz Smith mentioned, the concept of other relevant information was a big issue for the committee to try to understand. There was confusion about who was responsible for that judgment, and what criteria would be used. The committee was concerned that, by allowing employers to access the information despite the conviction itself being withheld, ORI would not allow individuals to move on from past offending behaviour, particularly in the case of childhood offending and care-experienced people. The minister outlined the sensitivity of the situation, and that she plans to clear up the confusion around it. ORI is a key aspect of the disclosure scheme and does not erode the power that can lead to barring under the PVG scheme or discrimination in employment. However, it is understood that Police Scotland and authorities must reflect very seriously when deciding whether to include ORI. Although the committee supports the continuing existence of lists of offences, some anomalies will have to addressed. For example, “fraud” and “embezzlement” appear in different lists, which was also highlighted in the Law Society of Scotland’s helpful briefing.

Changes to the PVG scheme are an important part of the bill. The committee supports mandatory membership, and the move away from lifetime membership to a renewable five-year membership. That means that those who no longer need the accreditation will not need monitoring, which will reduce the administrative burden.

Iain Gray reminded us of just how important and popular the PVG scheme is. Liz Smith mentioned that there was a bit of uncertainty around regulated work and regulated roles. That has led to confusion about who should—and should not—become a PVG scheme member, which I hope will be addressed. As Ross Greer said, that happens under the existing scheme. With regard to under-16s—whom Ross Greer featured heavily in his speech—we expressed concern that the proposal for non-registration could contribute to a decline in volunteering opportunities, depending on how people and companies interpret the legislation. I take the points that Ross Greer made, and I am sure that the Government will address the issue. It has said that the number of under-16s who apply to join the existing scheme is low, and that there is automatic listing for those with a serious offending background.

The strong message that we got from witnesses is that the PVG scheme is only one of a number of monitoring and screening processes, and that safeguarding will always be the top priority. As such, with important amendments that will be lodged at stage 2, the Disclosure Scotland Bill is a huge step forward in many areas, and I am happy to support its general principles.

15:52  

Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con)

I remind Parliament that I currently hold a PVG certificate, primarily because I am still active in coaching all age groups, and vulnerable groups. I am pleased to have the opportunity to speak in the debate. If I may, I will use my time to focus on the volunteering sector.

I think that we would all agree that every precaution must be put in place to ensure the safety of the young and the vulnerable. As Iain Gray highlighted, there are far too many high-profile cases in which the vulnerable have been let down, and we must do everything that we possibly can to make sure that every protection is in place. We know about the lifelong impact of adverse childhood experiences, which has been well documented in this place. As such, the need for a robust PVG check is apparent.

Having said that, I also highlight the need for the volunteering sector to be accessible to those who are so minded. Volunteering is crucial in so many areas, especially in enabling communities to access activities that tackle issues around isolation, health, education, and social interaction. The Deputy Presiding Officer knows that I have a real passion for that kind of preventative agenda, and such community activities have a central role to play in improving the health and wellbeing of our nation, and reversing a worrying trend in preventable ill health. Moreover, volunteering can have such a positive effect on the lives of the volunteers. As such, we need to ensure that opportunities exist, and are accessible, while ensuring that the highest standards of protection are not compromised.

I want to raise a specific issue that is illustrated by the case of a friend of mine against whom a vexatious allegation was made. It was eventually proved to be unfounded, but the impact on him as a coach and on his charges was profound. I recognise that such situations are very difficult to address, but address them we must. It is not a situation in which the person is innocent until proven guilty: they are removed from the situation immediately an allegation is made. How we should tackle that is an extremely difficult question, but I suggest that, in such situations, the coach could become supervised, potentially by another coach, to ensure that there is still protection.

When I renewed my PVG certificate recently, the process was not exactly simple or seamless. It required me and the club to fill in the forms and submit them to the governing body, and then we had to fill them in and submit them again when something went awry in the process. I then had to wait six weeks for clearance. It is a cumbersome process. I welcome the move to a digital system, which Liz Smith mentioned, as it should allow for a much more user-friendly experience. When a PVG certificate is renewed, all that is really being asked is whether anything has changed since the previous issue. A digital communication and collaboration platform should be able to access that data routinely. Such a system should also be much more effective in the on-going monitoring of those who already hold a PVG certificate, and it should be swifter in raising potential breaches. I look forward to the implementation of that system.

I also highlight that, at one time, I held three separate disclosure certificates for different organisations in order to work with the same sorts of vulnerable groups. There is surely no need for such duplication. Perhaps the bill will allow us to tidy up that situation.

The caveat that I want to highlight is that PVG checking should be seen not as an intrusive experience but as an enabler. It should be welcomed by all those who participate and it should keep parents satisfied that their children are being effectively supervised. On that point, members will know about the continuing petition on the subject, which the Public Petitions Committee is considering, as well as the Health and Sport Committee’s investigation of child welfare in sport. Those committees have certainly highlighted the issues, and it would seem that they are now being addressed. I hope that the outcomes of those investigations and actions will be positive. It is imperative that sports’ governing bodies implement the highest duty of care for their members. The work that those committees have done and continue to do demonstrates that there has been considerable variation in implementation of duties of care across governing bodies, so I would be interested to hear from the minister how the Scottish Government will ensure that there is full compliance with the legislation and how that will be monitored.

I was also interested in the points that Liz Smith made about PVG provision for former young offenders who have demonstrated a period of good behaviour. They brought to mind a scheme in Kilmarnock prison where inmates were offered the chance to take their football and rugby coaching exams. I took a parliamentary football and rugby team there to play the inmates and prison guards at football and rugby, which we all survived. It was a great opportunity to highlight that those people are still members of society and that, having served their due sentences for the crimes that they committed, they will be expected to reintegrate into society. It is clear to me that a coaching certificate allows such people the possibility of making a positive contribution to their community and their subsequent acceptance back into that community.

Of course, without the requisite disclosure certificate, they will not be allowed to deliver that coaching. I can definitely see the issues here. I am a parent who has all the same concerns that any other parent has, be they perceived or otherwise. However, if we are to create opportunities for those who have previously fallen foul of the law, we need to consider how the skills that they have learned during their sentences can be used in the community. Perhaps that will involve them working in partnership with other coaches and starting with the least vulnerable groups. Again, I would be interested to hear the minister’s thoughts on that.

Outside sport, I am working with a constituent in relation to allegations of historical childhood rape in schools. It is an extremely sensitive subject. It is part of a petition at the moment, and it has now gone to court. I would never comment on a particular court case, but the teacher in question at that time was just moved to another area and the PVG check did not follow him. Again, the bill perhaps gives us an opportunity to close what is, I think, a fairly major loophole in the law.

As has been outlined, the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill attempts to simplify the complex disclosure system in Scotland. That is very welcome. The reservation that has been expressed today, which I share, is that it does so in a complex manner. Evidence from the Law Society of Scotland, Children in Scotland, and Recruit with Conviction, concurs with that concern. I will not repeat that evidence, as it has already been highlighted.

Conservative members will support the bill at stage 1 but, in doing so, we recognise that there is a fairly hefty amount of work required to make it fit for purpose at subsequent stages. I urge the Scottish Government not to lose sight of the objective, which must be to ensure that the application process for a PVG certificate is user-friendly and does not deter those who wish to volunteer, all the while maintaining protection for those in our society who are most at risk. I am more than willing to work with the Government on that, should it see fit.

16:00  

Alex Neil (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)

I welcome the bill. Over the past 20 years or so, the Parliament has passed very few bills that will impact on as many people in Scotland as the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill will.

As Iain Gray pointed out, there are 1.2 million people registered with Disclosure Scotland. As Brian Whittle has just shown, registration can be a good experience, or not such a good experience; nonetheless, it impacts on people’s ability to serve their community in the way that they wish.

However it is not just about the 1.2 million people who are registered with Disclosure Scotland. We should think about all the people that those 1.2 million are actually responsible for. By the time we add up the number of children that teachers are responsible for; the number of people that registered social workers, social care workers and health workers are responsible for; the number of people that all the sports organisations in Scotland and third sector organisations are responsible for, we see that it is not 20 per cent of the Scottish population; it is probably nearer to double that figure. In other words, probably between 35 and 40 per cent of the Scottish population will be impacted by the bill. The bill is a major piece of work, and it is extremely important that we get it right.

There are two issues that I would like to raise with the minister. The first was mentioned by Liz Smith and concerns the Parliamentary Bureau and the Education and Skills Committee. It would not be the first time that when the Parliament passed primary legislation too quickly, we had to introduce corrective primary legislation because we did not do a thorough enough job the first time around. With such an important and complex bill, let us take our time to make sure that we get it right.

I understand from the convener of the committee that the timetable is not quite as tight as Liz Smith said. However, I say to the committee and to the Parliamentary Bureau that if it takes a bit longer to get it right, let us take that time. Otherwise, we could adversely impact the lives, not only of those who are registered, but of members of vulnerable groups in our society.

I make my other point as a member of the Public Audit and Post-legislative Scrutiny Committee, which has dealt with umpteen issues of IT systems in the public sector that have gone wrong. If we add up the number of those IT systems, and the total cost of not getting it right, over the past 20 years, we see that the cost runs well into hundreds of millions of pounds. More important, not getting things right can destroy the improvement that is intended in service delivery, because of the time that it takes to correct the systems that have gone wrong or have not been properly planned. I say therefore to the minister and Disclosure Scotland to do whatever they can, and everything that they can, to ensure that they get the IT system right.

Brian Whittle is absolutely right: we want to make sure that people do not need to wait six weeks for the process to be completed. People do not want to have to resubmit their application because the IT system is faulty. If we are really to make big improvements, by planning them, and by making sure at the project management stage that we get it right, we will save a lot of heartache, agony, and money, at a later stage. That is extremely important.

It would be a great tragedy if we were to pass this excellent bill, which still requires amendment and further consideration, as I said, and it were then to fall foul of those practical issues, which would undermine its purpose, scope and intention accordingly. It is better to take our time and get it right.

There are a number of specific issues that I want to raise. I will repeat many things that have already been said, including what Rona said about simplification, which is extremely welcome.

For those people who got into a bit of trouble in their teens and perhaps ended up getting a criminal record, but who are not bad people and have moved on in life, I particularly like the fact that they will not have to go through the rest of their lives being penalised. They will not have to miss opportunities to help others or have their potential or actual careers ruined because Disclosure Scotland is legally obliged to cast up information about something that happened many years ago, possibly in extenuating circumstances, and which did not involve a serious criminal offence. I am delighted that we can make life not as miserable for those people who have moved on and want to help others, rectify their mistakes and serve the community. They should be allowed to do so, so those progressive elements of the bill are very welcome.

The minister and the committee must listen to representations that are made to them by outside bodies, as Rona said. I do not always agree with the Law Society of Scotland, but in its submission, it requested further amendment to protect human rights and asked that we deal with the list of offences, as there are issues with it that clearly need to be sorted at stage 2. We have to take those comments seriously.

However, we also have to look at potential impacts on other aspects of the bill as amendments are considered. The bill must be seen in its totality. When considering amendments, we cannot look only at the sections that would be amended. With a bill of this complexity, we need to take a comprehensive view and consider the impact on and potential unintended consequences for other provisions of the bill.

The points that were made by the Law Society and a number of other organisations that made submissions are important.

I congratulate the Government on the bill and I congratulate the committee on its excellent work. There is a bit more work to be done, but by the time that we get to stage 3, I hope that we will have a bill of which we can all be proud.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

I remind members to always use colleagues’ full names when they refer to them in their speeches. I know that we are all pals, but it is useful for the official report and broadcasting staff.

16:08  

Mary Fee (West Scotland) (Lab)

I thank the Education and Skills Committee for its work throughout stage 1, which has provided us with an informative stage 1 report. I also express my gratitude to all the individuals and organisations who provided such valuable input to the committee’s inquiry and, prior to that, to the Scottish Government’s consultation on its proposed changes to the disclosure scheme.

As my colleague lain Gray said in his opening speech, we welcome the ambitions for the bill and will vote in favour of it at decision time.

The stage 1 report offers a wide range of recommendations to strengthen the bill, and I note from the Scottish Government’s response to the report that it will lodge amendments at stage 2 to strengthen the bill further. Those recommendations and the Government’s commitment to act on some of them are welcome in ensuring that the bill continues to meet the ambitions behind its introduction.

Simplifying the disclosure regime is necessary to reduce the complexities that many people face when navigating the system, as they must if they want to perform paid or voluntary work with children or people with complex needs, who are often vulnerable.

The reduction in the number of disclosure levels from four to two and in the number of products that are offered from 10 to four received significant support from respondents to the consultation, thus strengthening the arguments for simplifying the scheme. As Community Justice Scotland rightly pointed out in its submission:

“Simplification of this landscape is critical to ensure that people with convictions are afforded opportunities to move on with their lives.”

On many occasions in the chamber, I have argued for better rehabilitation for prisoners, and I believe that such simplification could support their rehabilitation into society and allow people whose offending behaviour lies in the past to live constructive and rewarding lives and put past events and behaviour behind them. Protecting the most vulnerable people in our society is a fundamental duty of any Government, and I believe that the bill continues to meet that duty while making it simpler for people to engage with the disclosure scheme.

I welcome the provision to introduce digital applications, which will make it easier for the applicant and reduce the administration for Disclosure Scotland and for employers who submit applications, but it is right that a non-digital system will remain in place for people who do not have access to a computer or the necessary skills to apply online. I also welcome the point raised by the criminal justice voluntary sector forum that people in the justice system are more likely to have speech, language and communication needs, lower educational attainment and higher rates of learning difficulties. It is very important that, regardless of need, people have the right support and access to information on disclosure.

Although I am supportive of the principles behind the bill, I have one area of concern, which surrounds the use of other relevant information. Assurances have been provided that a Scottish quality assurance framework will be developed in relation to Police Scotland sharing other relevant information, but I remain concerned about the sharing of information on behaviour that an applicant might have displayed during their childhood.

Alistair Hogg of the Scottish Children’s Reporter Administration said:

“The concept of ‘other relevant information’ is understandable, but disclosure of it, particularly in relation to behaviour that has happened during childhood or adolescence, needs a very high threshold.”—[Official Report, Education and Skills Committee, 13 November 2019; c 11-12.]

I fully agree with Mr Hogg’s point. That is where my reservations lie with regard to the sharing of other relevant information, especially for people who have come through the hearings system.

The Education and Skills Committee pointed out that

“the potential for disclosure of other relevant information held by the police undermines one policy objective of the Bill, which is to allow individuals to move on from past offending behaviours.”

I read carefully the minister’s response on the concerns that have been raised about the use of other relevant information, and I take on board the points that she made. However, I will observe with interest how the issue develops at stages 2 and 3.

I also support the ending of lifetime membership of the PVG scheme. There was widespread support for that part of the bill, because it will reduce some of the administration and monitoring of people who will no longer be required to be in the scheme. In evidence, the Church of Scotland raised concerns about how the transition from lifetime membership to five-year renewable membership would be managed. As the bill progresses, I look to the Government to set out clearly how that transition will be managed.

My only reservation in that regard is about the penalising of those who fall foul of the new term limits. I would not want anyone to be criminalised for failing to reapply, and I do not want people on low incomes who have to pay to reapply every five years to be financially burdened. I note that the current cost of an application is around £60. Therefore, I ask the minister to proceed with caution when she sets the fees in the future and to think of those low-paid workers and volunteers who pay for their membership themselves. The scheme cannot be a tax on people who perform valuable caring and support roles, or a barrier to them continuing in those roles.

16:14  

Jenny Gilruth (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)

I thank the Education and Skills Committee clerks, the bill team and all the witnesses who provided evidence ahead of the publication of our stage 1 report.

As we have heard today, the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill’s focus is on reforming how individuals’ past behaviour is recorded by the state. Furthermore, it makes provision for a number of changes to the PVG scheme, of which, as Iain Gray advised, there are more than 1 million members in Scotland.

As Rona Mackay outlined, the policy memorandum notes:

“The provisions of this Bill will deliver a range of positive and proportionate reforms to the disclosure regime in Scotland whilst also strengthening the barring service to maintain the Scottish Government’s ability to protect the most vulnerable in society.”

Part 1 of the bill considers the disclosure of unspent criminal convictions and other relevant information. Part 2 makes amendments to the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007. Other relevant information is information that currently can only be disclosed in an enhanced disclosure or a full PVG scheme record check. For example, it might include allegations that are held on local police records regarding an applicant’s behaviour, as Mary Fee outlined.

The bill proposes to reform the provision of ORI by ending the current process of disclosures being issued to employers before the applicant has had an opportunity to challenge the disclosure of any ORI. Furthermore, the bill will end the automatic disclosure of convictions that were accrued between the ages of 12 and 17. As Liz Smith pointed out, one of the key policy objectives of the bill is the acknowledgement of

“adolescence as a unique phase of life”.

As the centre for excellence for looked after children in Scotland noted in its submission:

“The disclosure of childhood information disproportionately affects young people and adults with care experience, who are more likely to have had contact with the police, and to have been involved in formal processes which lead to recording of behaviour.”

The Howard League Scotland agreed, saying:

“people who are looked after or care experienced often have arrested development and less opportunity to move on in life compared to somebody who is perhaps engaged in an isolated offence at the age of 13.”—[Official Report, Education and Skills Committee, 6 November 2019; c 26.]

The committee highlighted our concerns about the potential for disclosure of ORI to prevent individuals from moving on due to past offending behaviour. The issue was felt to be of particular concern with regard to childhood offending and for those who are care experienced. I was therefore glad to hear the minister refer to that specific point in her opening speech.

The Government’s response notes Police Scotland’s evidence to the committee, in which it asserted that all information is rigorously considered before any disclosure of ORI is made. The response also highlights provisions in the bill that give an applicant the opportunity to submit representations prior to the release of ORI.

Part 2 makes amendments to the 2007 act, and section 76 amends the meaning of “protected adult”. In its written submission to the committee, Scottish Women’s Aid raised some concerns, highlighting that the proposal to redefine “protected adult” will list vulnerability through “disability or illness”. In its submission, Scottish Women’s Aid stated that

“focussing ... on disability or illness created a loophole, as this definition would not automatically cover women experiencing domestic abuse”.

It goes on to state that the change to the definition that is provided for in section 76 is too limited and could create

“a specific issue for ... women experiencing domestic abuse who are accessing refuge accommodation”.

Scottish Women’s Aid has requested that section 76 be amended to include

“the full spectrum of services within which regulated roles in respect of ‘protected adults’ would exist.”

I raised that point with the minister in our evidence session and I know that Government officials have met Scottish Women’s Aid to discuss the organisation’s concerns, so I was absolutely delighted to hear the minister confirm that she will lodge amendments on the matter at stage 2.

One of the key aims of the bill is to simplify and modernise the disclosure system for users and organisations. The committee heard evidence that, for some people, the application process can provide further barriers to entering the labour market. As Robert Dorrian from Who Cares? Scotland explained in evidence,

“the stereotypical person engaging in the disclosure process may have had one or two moves, but what about the person who has had 14 or 16? The onus is on them to know about those changes, to know where they were at what time and to know about the support mechanism that is in place.”—[Official Report, Education and Skills Committee, 13 November 2019; c 21.]

Robert Dorrian was keen to point to the obligations that Disclosure Scotland has towards those with a care-experienced background, and to the role of corporate parents in ending what he described as “secondary discriminatory practices'” against care-experienced people. I note from the Government’s response that Disclosure Scotland is going to mount a major communications exercise in advance of any of the reforms that we are discussing today. I hope that the campaign will look to effectively consider the needs of care-experienced young people in particular, who might be reluctant to engage in the disclosure process through no fault of their own.

The committee was also cognisant that non-digital means of applying to the disclosure process should be maintained. As such, we welcomed the confirmation in the policy memorandum that, although a move to digital services will happen as part of the reforms, they will not fully replace non-digital ways of applying.

Today’s stage 1 debate is the start of a process of simplifying and modernising the disclosure system, with a focus on balancing public protection with the right to move on from past offences. As the committee heard, that is particularly pertinent to young people and those who are care experienced, who in the past may have ended up labelled for life.

I again thank those who provided the committee with evidence. I look forward to the next stage of our deliberations, in which we will focus on delivering a fairer disclosure system for the most vulnerable.

16:20  

Maurice Corry (West Scotland) (Con)

I welcome this first stage of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, and I thank the members of the Education and Skills Committee and the clerks for their efforts in producing the committee’s stage 1 report. I should declare that I am the holder of a PVG certificate and that I have a daughter who works at Disclosure Scotland.

The disclosure system in Scotland is undoubtedly complex and presents many areas that call for caution, clarification and improvement. The bill seeks to address those issues, and so, in principle, I support it at this stage.

The system that is delivered by Disclosure Scotland is designed to offer a layer of protection to vulnerable groups in society, which include children and protected adults. The system ensures that the recruitment process allows only suitable individuals to work with people in those groups; however, the bill needs to take a balanced approach. In seeking to protect vulnerable groups in our communities, it must also respect every individual’s right to privacy and recognise the right point at which rehabilitated individuals are entitled to move on from a past offence.

I appreciate the bill’s aim of simplifying the disclosure system. I hope that, by making it more user friendly, we will remove long-standing complexities in the system, making it easier to navigate. By streamlining the current four disclosure products of basic, standard, enhanced and PVG to two levels, which will cover basic disclosure and more serious offences, the bill will offer users and organisations much-needed simplified options.

Connected with that is the digitisation of the disclosure system, which is most welcome, as it will allow users to make applications and view their disclosures online. That will make the process quicker overall. However, I agree that a paper-based system should continue alongside that service, as we should be mindful of those who may not be computer literate and those who are based in areas without reliable internet connections. As my party’s spokesperson on veterans’ affairs, I am keen to highlight the submission of Royal Blind and Scottish War Blinded, which welcomed the idea of PVG membership cards as a sound alternative option to the digital process and sought greater clarification on how that might be implemented.

I know that I am not alone in having concerns about legislative overlap and discrepancy regarding the way in which the updated disclosure process will work in practice. The Centre for Youth and Criminal Justice, Social Work Scotland and Community Justice Scotland were just some of the organisations that highlighted that issue to the committee.

When the bill is linked with the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019, we are presented with inconsistencies regarding how childhood convictions should be treated and whether that is under a self-disclosure or a state disclosure regime. As has been mentioned, there is further confusion as to whether it is the date of the offence or the date of conviction that will be taken into account under the bill. I recognise that, as the minister has confirmed today, those discrepancies are being actively considered, but I hope that a logical solution will be found before stage 2. I fully agree with the valid points that Alex Neil made in that regard.

The move from lifetime membership of the PVG scheme to a renewable five-year membership will reduce the number of individuals who are monitored when that is no longer required and so ensure people’s right to privacy. At the same time, it will keep the system up to date and more manageable. As has been mentioned, the PVG scheme currently has more than 1.2 million members, and not all of those individuals are still carrying out regulated work. However, the evidence to the committee spoke of a need for clarity surrounding the transition period before the proposal is implemented. Such a period is needed to allow organisations to adhere to the change in a more feasible timeframe and with greater understanding.

Moreover, I join others in suggesting that, in relation to situations in which an individual has, by mistake, failed to renew their membership, further consideration should be given to moving away from penalties or short sentences, which are inconsistent with the sentiment behind the bill and the current legislation.

As has been mentioned, further clarity and guidance are needed before stage 2 on the change in concept from “regulated work” to “regulated roles” under the revised PVG scheme. That change, which will describe the work that is being undertaken, will offer greater accuracy. Despite that, many smaller businesses and organisations are uncertain about what may or may not be included under that description.

In the same thread, there may be scope to expand how the bill defines vulnerable groups. For instance, its definition of a protected adult arguably centres on protecting those with health-related needs, inadvertently missing out other vulnerabilities that may need protection, such as old age and homelessness. That is worth exploring, and I look forward to seeing whether it will be improved after further consideration by the minister and the committee.

It is clear that some areas of the bill need further detail to make it a workable improvement on the complicated system that we currently have. Although I support its key principles, further consideration is needed to address those issues, particularly as it is such an important piece of legislation.

16:25  

Gail Ross (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)

I add my thanks to the clerks, my fellow committee members and everyone who has given evidence to the Education and Skills Committee, both in writing and in person. It has been thorough and, at times, complicated, such is the depth and importance of the legislation that we are dealing with.

The bill will help to protect some of the most vulnerable people and groups in our communities and, as Alex Neil pointed out, it is imperative that we get it right the first time. The bill was introduced in the Scottish Parliament by the cabinet secretary last June, and it aims to simplify what is, as we have seen, an overcomplicated system of disclosure.

During scrutiny of the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007, the Government said that it would review the PVG scheme. As the scheme has been in place since 2011 and the Parliament has recently passed other, related pieces of legislation such as the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019, the decision was made to review and update the whole disclosure scheme.

As we have heard—this is what happens when you go last: everybody has said everything before you—various changes are being made, one of which is reform of the current suite of disclosure products. Currently, there are four types of disclosure checks: basic, standard, enhanced and PVG. The proposal is to replace those with level 1 disclosure, which would be the equivalent of basic, and level 2 disclosure, which would replace everything else. Responses to the Government’s consultation show that there is significant support for that reduction. Other feedback said that the complexity of the system lies not only in the suite of products that are available but in a lack of understanding of the underpinning legislation and difficulty in navigating the system.

The bill also makes changes to enable people to apply for and receive disclosures digitally. It is hoped that that, too, will simplify the system, but it is worth noting that there will still be a paper-based system for those who require it. That is in line with responses to the consultation that expressed support for the move to digital with the provision of a non-digital alternative. The committee also recommended full engagement with organisations that cannot access a digital platform. I am sure that the Public Audit and Post-legislative Scrutiny Committee will give that IT system proportionate and thorough scrutiny when the time comes.

One of the other major changes will be the ending of lifetime membership of the scheme and its replacement with a five-year renewable membership. Disclosure Scotland told the Education and Skills Committee that as many as 20 per cent of the 1.2 million people who are currently on the scheme no longer do regulated work. It considers it important that the scheme membership accurately represents the number of people in Scotland who undertake regulated roles. However, the committee was concerned about the proposed penalty of a short custodial sentence for those who fail to renew their membership, and it recommends that the Scottish Government look again at whether that is proportionate. I also agree with my colleague Mary Fee, who asked about people on low incomes. I am interested to hear from the minister whether there will be any help with funding for those individuals.

As I said, the bill does not stand alone. Like most of my colleagues, I love a package deal when it comes to legislation. It is our duty as legislators to ensure that the laws that we make fit together seamlessly, and a number of witnesses noted what they see as discrepancies between the bill and the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. Organisations such as the Centre for Youth and Criminal Justice, Social Work Scotland and Community Justice Scotland all expressed concern. Their concerns included state disclosure and self-disclosure, the date of the offence versus the date of the conviction and how the new acts will align with the new disclosure system. The Scottish Government has confirmed that it will lodge amendments at stage 2 to deal with any discrepancies. I also welcome the explanation that the minister gave to Liz Smith, which was extremely helpful in addressing such concerns. The committee recommended that any future legislation, such as the legislation incorporating the UNCRC, should work well together with the bill, and I was glad to see that the minister, in the Government’s written response, confirmed that that will be the case.

There was also broad support for the moves to reform how offences that are committed by young people between the ages of 12 and 17 are disclosed and to bring about the end of automatic disclosure. I will share a quote from Community Justice Scotland. It said:

“This, at a stroke would reduce the likelihood that people will experience discrimination based on events that happened when they were a child, which have no reflection on their current or future potential to work or study as fully rehabilitated adults”.

I have no doubt that, like any legislation that comes before us at stage 1, the bill will be amended at stage 2. However, the underlying aim of simplifying the disclosure scheme is entirely sensible—or, to use Ross Greer’s word, “sound”. The committee supports the general principles of the bill, and I urge other members to do the same.

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)

We move to closing speeches.

16:31  

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

I would like to begin as other members have, by thanking the clerks. We have had a thorough debate. Our stage 1 evidence was also thorough, and that is possible only because of the hard work and diligence of our clerks.

I also thank my fellow committee members. As Gail Ross has just outlined, we have done our jobs thoroughly, both in public and private discussion. That reflects—as does today’s debate—that sense of shared responsibility to get it right. We have no greater collective duty than to protect the welfare and wellbeing of our children and vulnerable people. There is also our responsibility in terms of the raw numbers: as Iain Gray pointed out, one in five people is in the PVG scheme. For those reasons, the bill is important.

It says a great deal that there was so much overlap between the opening speakers in the debate. We all share the minister’s sentiment that we should make this bold reform. In doing so, there are several things that we must do. First, we must balance the responsibility for protection with the right of the individual to move on from any past crimes or issues that they have had in their lives. Reform must be based on those principles and must provide simplification and predictability of the system.

Another issue, which was touched on by several speakers, and Ross Greer in particular, is about the perception of how the system will operate technically. That is why the two-stage test is so important. It is with a degree of trepidation that I am going to talk about this. I do not think that I have ever spoken in a debate in which so many people have predicted what I will say. The topic is an issue of concern for me. In itself, the two-stage test is sensible. Indeed, there is case law that establishes what it is and how it should operate at a high level. However, if we are seeking predictability, clarity is important.

Clan Childlaw was very clear that it would find it difficult to provide advice to people who have information disclosed under the bill on the basis of the two-stage test. If legal bodies and organisations such as Clan Childlaw cannot provide that, then the understandability of the law and how it will be operated is in question.

I would like to provide a counter-factual. Before I do that, I will make a small apology to the minister. When she was giving evidence, I set her the rather unfair test of being able to explain what the difference might be between “relevant” and “ought”. The key test is to be able to explain a situation in which information would be relevant but ought not to be disclosed—where the information would pass one hurdle but not the other.

Here is the issue. Relevance is easy to understand. It is about a situation or information that directly relates to the job that is being undertaken by the individual. The “ought” test is more complicated. “Ought” always relies on another underlying value in order to test it. I apologise if I sound like a philosophy graduate, but I am one, and I think that this is incredibly important. It should be informed by factors in the case law such as the time and context of the incident in question. The issue is that, if we are talking about proportionality or risk, one person’s proportionality is not the same as another’s. That is why we have to elaborate further.

I accept that the minister is saying that much of that will be laid out in guidance but, because those tests are so pivotal, it is very difficult to scrutinise the legislation without seeing that guidance if those values are not further explained in the bill. That is why I welcome the minister’s willingness to look at amendments at stage 2 to provide those tests. I urge her to examine the suggestion by the Law Society that we provide high-level principles, albeit amendable through secondary legislation and backed up by statutory guidance. That way we can scrutinise and understand how this law will operate. Importantly, the people who are potentially subject to it will also be able to understand it.

I will mention some issues that have been raised by members. The issue of other relevant information, which was mentioned by Mary Fee, Rona Mackay and others, is critically important. The glib analysis is that the conditions in the bill for disclosure of convictions are lengthy but section 18, on other relevant information, is very short. However, the reality is that, because of the volume of information that could be disclosed, the volume of other relevant information may be greater than the volume of conviction information. Counterintuitively, the other relevant information might also provide the very insight into those convictions that would not be disclosed because of the age of the individual but which might be disclosed as other relevant information. We need to examine that further and make sure that there are no such contradictions or loopholes.

Ross Greer’s examination of under-16s and the impact of volunteering highlights the point that I made at the beginning. It is important to understand the difference between how the provisions operate technically and how they are perceived. That is at the heart of that issue. We do not want to put off under-16s from volunteering, both because of the contribution that they can make and because of how valuable volunteering is for them.

I will touch on the issues with other legislation. It has been interesting for me, as a committee member, to examine this bill after spending some time on the Justice Committee during the passage of the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Bill. A number of members have identified an interaction between the two bills. It is also interesting to see how this bill fits with other legislation and how the Government plans for legislation. There are overlaps. I appreciate that the minister has said that she will bring forward guidance, but that is critical, because it comes down to confusion. Many people have made the point that, when you have confusion, you get overdisclosure, and that can exacerbate the stigma that is faced by individuals.

I urge the Government to think carefully about interactions when it plans legislation. We have three bills that have passed through this place in quick succession, yet we are questioning how those interactions will work and whether there are unintended consequences from different acts that have been passed within months of each other.

I will end by reflecting on the points that Alex Neil made. Let us take our time. If we need to take further evidence at stage 2 and contemplate those interactions and whether we have had adequate information from the Government, let us do that. Let us get this right. As so many people have pointed out, the bill will impact on the welfare and wellbeing of our children and so many people in Scotland who undertake invaluable volunteering work.

16:40  

Alison Harris (Central Scotland) (Con)

I declare that I, too, hold a PVG certificate.

I am pleased to be closing for the Scottish Conservatives in this stage 1 debate. As my colleague Liz Smith said in her opening speech, we support the principles of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. We all agree that protecting the most vulnerable people in our society is crucial, and if we can make the administration of that more efficient, we should.

The Education and Skills Committee’s stage 1 report expressed the committee’s view that it is “very concerned” with certain aspects of the bill. As Clare Adamson, Ross Greer and other members said in their speeches, one of those concerns is the impact that the bill could have on volunteers who are under the age of 16. The contribution that young people make through volunteering in any capacity cannot be overstated. Committee evidence revealed many concerns about the combination of the minimum age requirement of 16 and mandatory PVG membership for regulated roles. Indeed, one organisation stated that it is likely that the bill will

“be interpreted to mean young people under 16 cannot undertake regulated roles.”

I appreciate that the Scottish Government acknowledges that concern, but the area will require further clarity as the bill progresses.

Another issue that was highlighted in the committee was how the proposal to move away from lifetime PVG memberships to a five-year renewal period would be implemented. There needs to be a proper transition so that organisations do not end up with a huge budget commitment at the same time every five years due to current PVG members renewing on the same day. The minister suggested a couple of options for addressing that issue in her response to the committee’s report, and I look forward to debating them at stage 2.

I turn to the bill’s promise to digitise the disclosure system. The end goal is to increase efficiency, which would be a welcome outcome, but there are grave lessons to be learned from the recent move to the new IT system, which is known as PASS, or protecting and safeguarding Scotland. In the chamber in June, I raised with the minister concerns about the robustness of any IT system tied to the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. In response, the minister said:

“we are confident that the system is at an appropriate stage and will be completed in time for the delivery of the new services.”—[Official Report, 13 June 2019; c 69.]

Disclosure Scotland has a target to complete 90 per cent of disclosure checks within 14 days, but in September last year, the percentage of PVG checks completed within that target fell to 47.8 per cent, and in October it fell again, to just 12.5 per cent.

I heard at first hand about the huge delays to disclosure checks from childcare providers who were unable to put staff in place to work due to PVG checks taking twice as long as they should. At the end of October, I wrote to the Minister for Children and Young People, and in her response, she told me that the delays were partly due to seasonal pressures causing an increase to workloads and partly due to the “bedding in” of the new digital PASS system, which went live in September 2019.

The recent Audit Scotland report on Disclosure Scotland highlighted a reduction in its performance in November. That report made for very interesting reading. It included a summary of the transition to the PASS system, which showed that Disclosure Scotland’s June 2015 proposal to the Scottish Government to take the digital contract out of BT’s hands was rejected for its high cost: £77.2 million over the transition period of 2015-16 to 2022-23. According to the Audit Scotland report, four months later, Disclosure Scotland returned with a second proposal, stating a projected cost of £34.1 million. The Scottish Government accepted the revised offer. However, in the years since, there have been several revisions to the budget forecast, and in November 2019, the costs were higher than the original figure of £77.2 million that was rejected by the SNP Government.

The bottom line is that the PASS system is over budget. It was not ready to be fully rolled out in September, and, as I previously stated, lessons have to learned from that, especially in the light of digital updates being required with the passing of the disclosure bill. At this stage, I acknowledge the very pertinent comments that Alex Neil made about IT systems.

The final issue that I will discuss today is the bill’s coherence with other legislation that has been passed by the Scottish Parliament. As other members have mentioned, several recent parliamentary acts have legislated on similar issues to the ones on which this bill legislates. Those acts include the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019—very recent acts that may need to be amended to correct the contradictions and discrepancies that could arise because of the introduction of the bill.

I agree with the Education and Skills Committee's conclusion about the importance of ensuring that no more discrepancies arise when incorporating the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child into Scots law. The minister's response to the stage 1 report stated that the disclosure bill was designed with the principles of the UNCRC in mind, but it did not confirm that changes to the bill would not be required when incorporating the UNCRC into Scots law. Instead of taking a piecemeal approach to legislation, it is important to ensure that those pieces of legislation work well together, as Beatrice Wishart mentioned in her speech.

I reiterate that we will support the bill at stage 1. However, we fully believe that amendments and clarifications are required at stage 2 on the issues that have been raised in the chamber today—more issues than I have been able to cover—such as ORI, which I know that Mary Fee and Daniel Johnson have mentioned. I also appreciate that, in her opening speech, the minister said that there is a need for clarification and discussion on those.

Several MSPs have discussed the new lists of offences and regulated roles, and those are areas requiring close consideration going forward. For the continued protection of vulnerable groups—which everyone in the chamber acknowledges is essential—we need this legislation to be right.

16:47  

Maree Todd

I thank the members for their contributions. I am very pleased that there is support throughout the chamber for the general principles of the bill.

The debate has been constructive, so I want to make it absolutely clear that I am committed to continuing to work together in this complex area. I have listened carefully to the debate and will consider the issues that have been raised today and in the committee’s report, as we proceed.

The bill will enhance existing protections and close potential safeguarding gaps, thereby creating a more robust disclosure system. The bill refocuses the PVG scheme on people who have power or influence over children and protected adults.

It was evident from the Health and Sport Committee’s consideration of child protection in sport—in particular, when it discussed the role of football scouts—that many people who were involved at senior level did not appreciate the power imbalance that exists between clubs and children. I reiterate my appreciation to the stakeholders who have engaged with us on the change to regulated roles, and who continue to provide feedback. It is absolutely vital in ensuring that the legislation provides sufficient coverage to protect vulnerable groups.

My priority is the continued ability of the disclosure system to support protection of the most vulnerable people in society. People who, because of their past conduct, are unsuitable for undertaking such roles must still be prevented from doing so.

However, it is important that children are treated as children. The children’s hearings system and the focus on early and effective intervention provide a proportionate and flexible response to harmful or criminal behaviour by children. The disclosure system must be able to take a proportionate approach to including information from that meek period of life, and I believe that the bill allows us to do so.

It is important that we have a disclosure system that gives all applicants greater control over their information. Some people’s past conduct makes them unsuitable for roles with vulnerable groups or valuable assets. However, that must not be used to prevent all people who have convictions from accessing employment, which we know helps to reduce reoffending. To do that would also deny our communities the value of such people’s skills and experience. For most people with convictions, the passage of time and living a law-abiding life provides a basis for them to access work and make a great contribution to society.

I recognise that that can be difficult for employers, so I encourage anyone who wants to learn more about employing people with convictions to access the free “Scotland works for you” training that is offered by Disclosure Scotland. That initiative helps employers to understand how to make risk assessments on conviction and rehabilitation.

Legislation gives us the levers to reform disclosure. However, in order for individuals truly to be able to access their rights, comprehensive and accessible guidance about the disclosure system must be available, so the Scottish Government is committed to delivering that. Guidance will be provided in various formats for a range of audiences, and will be developed in conjunction with users and stakeholders, including children and young people and organisations that advocate for them. We already have interest from a range of groups that want to support Disclosure Scotland in developing the guidance.

I will pick up on a number of issues that were highlighted during the debate by multiple members. I assure members that if I do not manage to respond to particular issues, my door is always open, and I am more than willing to meet members and to facilitate access to officials, if they want further clarity.

On coherence, I refer members to the Government’s written response to the committee’s stage 1 report, which highlighted that

“The Government progressed all three pieces of legislation—the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019, the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill—by adopting a joined up policy model, sharing ideas, information and team members, ensuring policy coherence uniting the three.

Each Act (or Bill) has had its own parliamentary journey and the provisions of each are absolutely consistent with each other in broad policy terms”.

Liz Smith

The minister is right that the Scottish Government has gone into considerable detail. I hope that it has done that with legal advisers on some of the definitions. The challenge that we face is in getting things across to some stakeholders—practitioners who will have to operate the system—because the language is complex. I ask the minister to reflect on that point.

Maree Todd

Certainly. I hope that members acknowledge that our work with stakeholders has been thorough and committed. We will continue that work and make sure that we respond to concerns that they raise during the progress of the bill.

When the bill was introduced last year, the other two connected pieces of legislation had not yet been enacted, so it is inevitable that there will be procedural and technical inconsistencies between them that require to be remedied. We foresaw that and are committed to bringing everything fully into line by stage 2. I reassure the committee that the bill was drafted with regard to the UNCRC principles and the Children and Young People (Scotland) Act 2014.

Another frequently raised issue was decision making and the two-part test. As I set out in my opening remarks, I accept the calls to include more detail in the bill on decision making around the tests for relevance and what ought to be included. I am carefully considering the recommendations on how best to include those principles without compromising the flexibility that is necessary to give full consideration to each set of circumstances.

It is helpful to be clear about the type of information that we are talking about. The two-part test of whether something is relevant to the purpose of disclosure and ought to be included in the disclosure applies to three separate categories of information: other relevant information, childhood conviction information and removable convictions. Although the wording is the same, the tests will be applied in different contexts, depending on the information in question and the stage in the review process. Maintaining the same wording is absolutely crucial.

Daniel Johnson

Will the minister reflect on the fact, which I accept, that the test will apply differently in those different contexts, and consider whether that underlines the need for greater clarification and, perhaps, for including it in the bill?

Maree Todd

Certainly. As I set out in my opening remarks, I will lodge a stage 2 amendment to address the committee’s recommendation to include the principles in the bill.

We have begun engagement with stakeholders to develop guidance that is to be used by decision makers. The crux of the issue is to make the outcome of any assessment or review process more foreseeable and accessible to disclosure applicants. User-friendly guidance is essential not just for applicants, but for those who support them.

A number of members talked about how challenging and complex the bill is. However, I have confidence that Parliament can rise to meet the challenges, and that our close working with stakeholders will enable us to communicate about the legislation once we have completed it.

Disclosure Scotland’s digital transformation is paving the way for the work that will take forward the bill’s provision’s; many of the innovative changes in the bill could not have been implemented using the previous IT system. PASS is already dealing with all Disclosure Scotland’s current business, and we will work with our customers to ensure that there are solutions for delivery of the bill that meet everyone’s needs. Lessons have been learned from implementation of the original PVG scheme in 2011 and the current digital transformation at Disclosure Scotland. The digital functions that will be required to implement the bill will be developed using Agile, as set out in the financial memorandum. Disclosure Scotland will begin the discovery phase for bill implementation in the coming months.

With regard to the Auditor General for Scotland’s section 22 report, Disclosure Scotland will consider the report’s findings and take appropriate action to address the points that have been raised. In fact, it has already made a number of changes to improve clarity of governance, including creation of a change delivery advisory panel to provide critical challenge, support and assurance.

The Presiding Officer

Can I take a moment to ask members to keep their conversations to a minimum? Thank you.

Maree Todd

Thank you.

The introduction of a minimum age on disclosure is not unique. The Disclosure and Barring Service introduced a lower limit of 16 years of age back in 2012 and AccessNI did the same in 2015. The legislation that we are introducing is therefore coming into line with what already occurs in the rest of the UK. I am conscious of the concern that an unintended consequence of the measure would be a reduction in volunteering opportunities for children. Disclosure Scotland will work with Volunteer Scotland disclosure services and across the Scottish Government to ensure that organisations that offer volunteering to under-16s understand the changes and continue to offer opportunities to children.

Ross Greer

Will the Government agree to the review that the Education and Skills Committee has asked for into the bill’s impact on participation of under-16s in volunteering?

Maree Todd

Certainly. As I said, we are more than happy to work with bodies that represent volunteers in Scotland to see whether there is a change in the level of volunteering. As Mr Greer does, I understand just how significant children and young people’s volunteering is. In fact, children and young people volunteer at about twice the rate of adults, so volunteering is important not only for children but for Scotland, so we must ensure that they are able to continue to volunteer and that we do not introduce any barriers to that.

On penalties for the offence under the bill, I reassure members that when we introduce a mandatory scheme, it can be effective only if it is supported by a criminal offence for non-compliance. However, the penalties in the bill are consistent with provisions in existing legislation. Although the legislation currently includes the penalty of imprisonment, there has been no sentencing to prison of people who have not navigated the system appropriately since the legislation was introduced.

All those issues are important. I thank members for raising them throughout the debate. Although we are focusing on the general principles at this stage, I again reassure members that the discussion with stakeholders on the proposals in the bill, on implementation and on planning will continue.

I again offer to meet members from all parties. I am open to discussing the detail of the bill and taking the time that is needed to work through the complexities.

I consider that the committee’s approval of the principles and the general tone of today’s debate are indicative of a shared view across the parties that we need to reform the disclosure system. Together, we can ensure that it continues to protect the most vulnerable people in our society, while also being rights-respecting and proportionate. I look forward to taking our next steps together.

16 January 2020

Financial resolution

A financial resolution is needed for Bills that may have a large impact on the 'public purse'.

MSPs must agree to this for the bill to proceed.

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Financial resolution transcript

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)

The next item of business is consideration of motion S5M-19992, in the name of Derek Mackay, on the financial resolution for the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill.

Motion moved,

That the Parliament, for the purposes of any Act of the Scottish Parliament resulting from the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, agrees to—

(a) any expenditure of a kind referred to in Rule 9.12.3(b) of the Parliament’s Standing Orders arising in consequence of the Act, and

(b) any charge or payment in relation to which Rule 9.12.4 of the Standing Orders applies arising in consequence of the Act.—[Derek Mackay]

16 January 2020

Vote at Stage 1

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Vote at Stage 1 transcript

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)

The first question is, that motion S5M-20452, in the name of Maree Todd, on stage 1 of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, be agreed to.

Motion agreed to,

That the Parliament agrees to the general principles of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill.

The Presiding Officer

The next question is, that motion S5M-19992, in the name of Derek Mackay, on the financial resolution for the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, be agreed to.

Motion agreed to,

That the Parliament, for the purposes of any Act of the Scottish Parliament resulting from the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, agrees to—

(a) any expenditure of a kind referred to in Rule 9.12.3(b) of the Parliament’s Standing Orders arising in consequence of the Act, and

(b) any charge or payment in relation to which Rule 9.12.4 of the Standing Orders applies arising in consequence of the Act.

The Presiding Officer

The final question is, that motion S5M-20456, in the name of Fergus Ewing, on the Direct Payments to Farmers (Legislative Continuity) Bill, be agreed to.

Motion agreed to,

That the Parliament agrees that the relevant provisions of the Direct Payments to Farmers (Legislative Continuity) 2020 Bill, introduced in the House of Commons on 9 January 2020, bringing the legislation governing the 2020 CAP direct payment schemes into domestic law, granting powers to fix deficiencies in that legislation and to keep pace with changes in EU law during the Implementation Period, so far as these matters fall within the legislative competence of the Scottish Parliament or alter the executive competence of the Scottish Ministers, should be considered by the UK Parliament.

16 January 2020

MSPs agreed that this Bill could continue

Who spoke to the lead committee on the Bill before Stage 2:

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The Convener (Clare Adamson)

Good morning, and welcome to the fourth meeting in 2020 of the Education and Skills Committee. I welcome Oliver Mundell, who is substituting for Alison Harris. I congratulate Jenny Gilruth on her promotion, as she has become a Scottish Government minister. Jenny’s experience in teaching has been a great asset to the committee over the past few years. We thank her for her contribution and wish her all the best in her new role.

I remind everyone present to turn their mobile phones and other devices to silent for the duration of the meeting.

Agenda item 1 is an evidence session on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill with the bill team. I welcome Kevin Lee, the bill team leader, from Disclosure Scotland; and Gemma Grant, a lawyer with the Scottish Government’s legal directorate. As the committee is aware, we arranged this additional session between stages 1 and 2 to assist our consideration of potential amendments. Today, we will hear from the Scottish Government bill team on the Government’s intentions for stage 2 amendments. I invite Kevin Lee to make an opening statement on the planned amendments before we move to questions from the committee.

Kevin Lee (Disclosure Scotland)

Good morning, and thank you for inviting us to provide further evidence on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. The policy note that the minister provided to the committee explains how the bill interacts with the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 and the recently passed Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 and Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019.

In considering the note, it will be helpful for the committee to keep in mind that the changes that we propose to the 1974 act are principally concerned with the rules on self-disclosure of unspent convictions under that act and how those rules relate to the content of a level 1 disclosure. At present, the rules for self-disclosure and the content of a basic disclosure, which is equivalent to a level 1 disclosure, are broadly aligned. The disclosure system therefore backs up the duty to self-disclose unspent convictions, as it can be used by organisations to verify that the person has told the truth when disclosing previous convictions.

As the committee will be aware, there are separate rules for what is referred to as the higher-level disclosure regime, which is to be replaced with level 2 disclosures under the bill. There are special rules on the self-disclosure of spent convictions after they have appeared on a level 2 disclosure. The changes that are described in the policy note do not affect those particular rules, as they are contained in secondary legislation.

As the policy note sets out, we need to amend the 1974 act in order to give full effect to the bill’s provisions on childhood convictions. If we did not do that, people would have to self-disclose unspent childhood convictions for minor offences that would be unlikely to appear on state disclosure if there was a case-by-case consideration of what ought to be disclosed. To protect individuals from overdisclosure of unspent childhood convictions, the rules for self and state disclosure need to mirror each other more closely.

As is the case now with basic disclosures, a level 1 disclosure will be available to any individual for any purpose. Such disclosures tend to be used for general employment purposes but not for jobs with access to high-value assets or for work with vulnerable groups. The biggest users of that level of disclosure at present are agencies that offer to process disclosure checks for businesses that are recruiting in industry—for example, in the construction, retail and hospitality sectors.

Outside the proposed mandatory PVG—protecting vulnerable groups—scheme, there is no obligation on organisations to obtain a state disclosure for any particular role. Some employers and organisations in the insurance industry do not obtain state disclosures as a matter of course. That means that the duty to self-disclose might be the only safeguarding measure that should ensure that organisations find out about past convictions when a person is applying for a job or for insurance. For that reason, we cannot end the duty to self-disclose unspent childhood convictions entirely, as it could lead to employers and insurers making uninformed risk-based assessments.

We therefore need bespoke rules on the self-disclosure of unspent childhood convictions, and we need to ensure that those rules are generally reflected in the rules on state disclosure so that individuals are not at risk of overdisclosing their criminal past.

Under the approach that we have set out in the policy note, the majority of childhood convictions will become spent immediately. The same approach was taken under the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 in relation to children’s hearings disposals. As a level 1 disclosure can include information only about unspent convictions, there will be no disclosure of childhood convictions in the vast majority of cases. Making most childhood convictions spent immediately will make it clear to young people what they must self-disclose.

That general provision is subject to the clear and understandable exceptions that are described in the policy note, ensuring that public protection is served and that individuals will know their legal duties.

My colleague and I would be pleased to take any questions.

Dr Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)

I have a relatively self-contained or simple question about how the disclosure process might affect voluntary organisations, particularly religious groups. I was recently lobbied by the churches. They pointed out that they are very supportive of the changes but that, at one point in the process, they are asked to categorise their activities as leisure activities. People are probably not quick to take offence, but some might hesitate to bracket their faith organisation alongside a golf club. There might be an equality issue to look at in that respect.

The churches’ more substantial question is whether it would be simpler to have a box that could be ticked for religious or faith groups, to avoid confusion in that part of the process—and they already have to deal with quite a bit of confusion when it comes to how people fill in the forms. Does the Government intend to respond to that self-contained question from some organisations about one bit of the process?

Kevin Lee

Schedules 3 and 4 describe what regulated roles are. The intention was never to describe in forensic detail every possible role that could exist across Scotland. We opted for a broad description of some activities to capture what we mean by regulated roles. That sits alongside the meaning of contact, because the two parts must come together.

We can certainly look at the feedback from the religious establishments and consider whether there is a better way to cater for their interests.

Gemma Grant (Scottish Government)

The Government intends to publish guidance to sit alongside the less core activities that are set out in the schedules. Perhaps the point can be addressed in guidance, so that religious groups will know which categories in the schedules apply to their particular activities.

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

I want to follow up on the codification of the principles underlying the two-part test. I see from the Government’s note that it intends to lodge amendments that would add that to the bill while making it amendable by secondary legislation. It is welcome to have that commitment, but is there the possibility of getting additional clarity? Obviously, a number of different approaches could be taken and, indeed, there are different ways in which those principles could be fleshed out. Can you provide additional information at this time?

Kevin Lee

I can confirm that, as we have set out in the correspondence that has been sent to the committee, the intention is to lodge amendments at stage 2 that address the committee’s recommendations on having codified principles in the bill that can be amendable by secondary legislation. Those principles will be based on and reflect the case law that we have discussed in previous sessions, but the intention is not to limit them in that way. We have committed to producing statutory guidance, which we will consult stakeholders on. Factors could come out of that piece of work, including what should be in the statutory guidance. There could also be other relevant matters to take into account when applying the two-part test.

Daniel Johnson

The commitment is to make the principles amendable by secondary legislation. I assume that that would be through the affirmative procedure rather than through the negative procedure. However, altering the principles could have a significant impact on the effect of the legislation. Is it the Government’s intention to make the legislation amendable through the affirmative procedure?

Gemma Grant

The intention is to have the codified principles as a set of two lists of principles that decision makers may take into account when applying both parts of the two-part test, which relate to relevance and whether something ought to be disclosed. That recognises that the principles for each test are slightly different—they overlap to an extent, but there are different factors.

As Kevin Lee said, the lists are not intended to be definitive; they are simply principles that may be taken into account. Any proposals to amend the lists by way of secondary legislation would be made in order to reflect any significant developments in case law and to give the Government flexibility around that.

Daniel Johnson

One of the key concerns about how the two-part test might impact or be implemented relates to other relevant information, or ORI. There is a particular issue with situations in which an offence is not disclosable because it occurred when the individual was a juvenile but it might be disclosable as other relevant information. Will there be an attempt to capture or codify that within the principles? To paraphrase, the Government’s response is, in essence, that we should trust the probity and robustness of the decision making by the Government and the police. That is reasonable, but it makes sense to try to capture the principles of that in the codification of the two-part test. Is it the Government’s intention to do that?

Kevin Lee

Yes. The intention is to apply the codification to all relevant decision makers—to Disclosure Scotland, on behalf of ministers, the chief constable and the independent reviewer. The independent reviewer has similar functions under the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019, so the intention is to apply the codified principles to the decisions that the independent reviewer has to make under that act. Likewise, the chief constable has duties to provide ORI under the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007 in relation to what goes on a scheme member’s account. The intention is to apply the codified principles across all three pieces of legislation so that there is a consistent approach.

Daniel Johnson

I assume that that will deal explicitly with the concept of adolescence being a particularly sensitive period of life, as is set out in the policy memorandum.

Kevin Lee

Yes. When Sheena Brennan gave evidence on behalf of Police Scotland, at the beginning of stage 1, she confirmed that the police take into account the person’s age at the time in deciding whether to provide ORI.

Just to be clear, as the committee will be aware, there is nothing new in relation to ORI. There is nothing regressive in the bill on that; it is actually progressive in that it gives individuals a better opportunity to challenge such information before it goes on a level 2 disclosure to an employer, for example.

To answer your question, the intention is to cater for the issues that have been addressed across the board for all decision making.

Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)

The policy note states that you will

“introduce a clear set of rules into the 1974 Act which explain which types of childhood convictions will become spent immediately and which ones should be subject to the usual disclosure periods”.

What criteria are you using for that, and when will we know what those offences are?

Kevin Lee

As we set out in the policy note, the intention is that the majority of childhood convictions will be spent immediately, and there is only a small category of excepted sentences that will follow the normal rules in the 1974 act. Those are sentences of over 48 months—which the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 refers to as “excluded sentences”—and, for sexual offences, anything that resulted in imprisonment for more than 12 months. The category of excepted sentences has been set out in the policy note, and that will be reflected in the amendments that are made to the 1974 act.

Rona Mackay

The policy note also states:

“If an employer has not asked Disclosure Scotland for a disclosure the individual will still be obliged to tell their prospective employer about these types of convictions in all cases.”

What will be the consequences if an individual does not do that?

10:15  

Gemma Grant

There are certain protections under the 1974 act. Once a conviction becomes spent, if somebody is asked about it and an employer subsequently finds out about that conviction, the person is protected from prejudice resulting from their not having disclosed it. Those protections do not apply when convictions are unspent. It would be for an employer potentially to take action against an employee if they had not complied with their legal duty to self-disclose and if that had had consequences for recruitment decisions that the employer had made.

Rona Mackay

Are you saying that it is a matter between the employer and the employee?

Gemma Grant

Yes.

Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

I have a question that arose in the evidence that we took during the private discussion groups that we had with stakeholders. It is about a potential situation in which a complaint is made to the person in a group or society who is in charge of the PVG link and the complaint relates to them. What happens to the disclosure procedure within that group? Who is responsible for taking that forward if the complaint is made about the person who is technically responsible for overseeing the disclosure procedure in that group?

Kevin Lee

Do you mean in the context of consideration for listing?

Liz Smith

The question was put to us by a lady representing quite an important group—I will not name it—who said that, within any group or society, there will be somebody who is responsible for overseeing the PVG management of any members who are working with children or whoever it may be. If a complaint was made about that responsible adult, what would happen? It is not clear what that situation would entail.

Kevin Lee

Regarding consideration for listing, if the complaint involved the person who was at the top of the tree and if there was a professional regulatory body, the regulator would be notified. If the complaint was made in a voluntary setting, and depending on the content of the complaint, the police might have a role to play if it was a public interest disclosure.

Liz Smith

If a serious complaint was made about a person and that person rightly decided to take a back seat while the complaint was investigated, there would obviously be a responsibility within the association or group to continue ensuring that vulnerable children were protected. Who would take over that role while that inquiry took place? I can see some loopholes in the legislation if that is not carefully thought about.

Gemma Grant

Would that individual possibly be acting as the lead signatory if the organisation was an accredited body?

Liz Smith

Yes—and let us say that it was.

Gemma Grant

Organisations can nominate a substitute or a replacement lead signatory, so it might be able to nominate another person.

Liz Smith

Is there an obligation to do that, or does that happen only when something arises? I am concerned that there is a loophole, because there could be a time factor. If a serious allegation was made about somebody, that person would normally step back for the period of the investigation. However, if there was nobody to take over the responsibilities of that person, there would be a gap. I am concerned about that, and I am asking how that would be addressed.

Kevin Lee

Concerning the protection of children and of protected adults, the bill proposes that ministers can impose conditions on scheme members who are under consideration for listing. In the circumstance that you describe, ministers might impose conditions to ensure that children and protected adults were safeguarded. In relation to the person’s function as someone who is able to countersign level 2 disclosures and process that information, there are procedures by which ministers can say that that function has to be taken over by another lead signatory.

Liz Smith

I understand that. We have to accept that these situations sometimes arise. If a serious complaint is made, it happens right there and then, when the matter is exposed in one way or another, and there is a short timescale for action. We cannot wait for ministers to intervene in a particular case; we must have a process whereby somebody within the association, who is in charge of signatures or whatever it might be, knows what they have to do in such circumstances. We cannot leave it to Government ministers; we must have a watertight procedure just in case something else happens when the person who is responsible for managing people’s PVG membership is not there.

Gemma Grant

In the legislation as it is currently framed, it is more of a matter of individual organisations satisfying themselves that they have their own contingency measures, so that they have the power to nominate a substitute lead signatory or to nominate one or more countersignatories who can continue to countersign applications—

Liz Smith

So, there will be guidance on it.

Kevin Lee

Yes.

Gemma Grant

Yes, there will be guidance on that.

Kevin Lee

Those arrangements—a code of practice and so forth—exist now, under the auspices of the registered persons system, which is changing to an accredited bodies system under the bill. The information-sharing arrangements that exist for higher-level disclosures are not changing fundamentally.

Liz Smith

I ask that the Government take some notice of the issue, because the person who raised it was very exercised about it, and I understood exactly why. We have an obligation to make things absolutely watertight in any situation in which a complaint is made against the lead person.

The Convener

It comes back to some of the evidence that we heard from smaller organisations, which do not have a big capacity. Quite often, when they seek help in such circumstances, they are just directed to the guidance, which is very technical. There perhaps needs to be consideration of how the guidance could be simplified to make it absolutely crystal clear and easy to access. Also, support should be provided for smaller organisations that find themselves in such a situation.

Liz Smith

I agree with that.

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

The committee raised some concerns about the bill’s definition of a “protected adult”. In the Scottish Government’s response, the bill team says that the Government intends to lodge amendments to deal with some of the issues around that definition. Can you provide any more detail of how you intend to do that?

Kevin Lee

Our intention is to fully address the concerns that were raised, particularly by Scottish Women’s Aid, which made valid points about what it identified as gaps in the revised definition.

Iain Gray

Have you consulted those stakeholders as you try to do that?

Kevin Lee

Yes. I have spoken to Scottish Women’s Aid about that particular issue.

Rona Mackay

When will we see those Government amendments?

Kevin Lee

They will be lodged by noon on Tuesday 25 February.

Rona Mackay

We will see them then. Thank you.

The Convener

Those are all the questions that members had this morning. I thank the witnesses very much for coming along—it has been very helpful. I will suspend the meeting briefly to let the witnesses leave the room.

10:24 Meeting suspended.  

10:24 On resuming—  

19 February 2020

Stage 2 - Changes to detail 

MSPs can propose changes to the Bill. The changes are considered and then voted on by the committee.

Changes to the Bill

MSPs can propose changes to a Bill  these are called 'amendments'. The changes are considered then voted on by the lead committee.

The lists of proposed changes are known as a 'marshalled list'. There's a separate list for each week that the committee is looking at proposed changes.

The 'groupings' document groups amendments together based on their subject matter. It shows the order in which the amendments will be debated by the committee and in the Chamber. This is to avoid repetition in the debates.

How is it decided whether the changes go into the Bill?

When MSPs want to make a change to a Bill, they propose an 'amendment'. This sets out the changes they want to make to a specific part of the Bill.

The group of MSPs that is examining the Bill (lead committee) votes on whether it thinks each amendment should be accepted or not.

Depending on the number of amendments, this can be done during one or more meetings.

First meeting on amendments

Documents with the amendments considered at this meeting on 4 March 2020:

Video Thumbnail Preview PNG

First meeting on amendments transcript

The Convener

Our next agenda item is stage 2 of the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. I welcome to the committee Maree Todd, who is the Minister for Children and Young People, and her officials.

Everyone should have a copy of the bill, the marshalled list of amendments, which sets out the amendments in the order in which they will be debated, and the groupings of amendments.

It might be helpful to explain the procedure briefly. There will be one debate on each group of amendments. I will call the member who lodged the lead amendment in the group to speak to and move that amendment, and to speak to other amendments in the group. I will then call other members who have lodged amendments in that group. Members who have not lodged amendments in the group but who wish to speak to amendments should indicate that by catching my or the clerk’s attention. The debate on the group will be concluded by me inviting the member who moved the lead amendment in the group to wind up.

Following the debate on each group, I will check whether the member who moved the lead amendment in the group wishes to press it to a vote or seek to withdraw it. If they wish to press the amendment, I will put the question on it. If a member wishes to withdraw their amendment after it has been moved, they must seek members’ agreement to do so. If any member objects, the committee will immediately vote on the amendment.

If a member does not want to move their amendment when it is called, they should say, “Not moved.” Please note that any other member present may then move the amendment. If no one moves the amendment, I will immediately move on to the next amendment in the marshalled list.

Only committee members are allowed to vote. Voting is by a show of hands, so I urge everyone to keep their hands clearly raised until the clerks have recorded the vote. The committee is required to indicate formally that it has considered and agreed to each section of the bill, so I will put the question on each section at the appropriate point.

Our aim is to complete part 1 of the bill today. I refer members to the marshalled list.

Section 1—Level 1 disclosure

The Convener

Group 1 is entitled “Level 1 and Level 2 disclosures: childhood convictions: alignment of state and self-disclosure provisions”. Amendment 1, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 2, 5 to 17, 20, 21, 52, 53, 58, 62, 90, 92, 98 and 201.

The Minister for Children and Young People (Maree Todd)

Good morning, convener. I am pleased to be moving the Government’s amendments to the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill this morning. They reflect the level of engagement that has continued since the bill was introduced, and the committee’s constructive scrutiny of the bill.

The first group of amendments is concerned with the rules on self-disclosure of unspent convictions under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 and how those rules relate to the provisions in the bill on state disclosure of childhood convictions.

When we introduced the bill, we were aware that further changes would be needed in order to align the disclosure rules in the bill with the self-disclosure regime under the 1974 act, in relation to childhood convictions. If an unspent childhood conviction is not disclosable by the state, the individual should have the right to treat a question from prospective employers and others about previous convictions as excluding that relevant childhood conviction. We were therefore conscious that there would have to be symmetry in the provisions of the state and the self-disclosure regimes in order to give full effect to the policy intent of the bill.

As was explained to the committee at the outset, our intention was always to address that through stage 2 amendments, once changes to the 1974 act that were made by the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 had been enacted. The main challenge arises in relation to unspent childhood convictions, particularly in sectors that do not routinely use the disclosure system to verify the existence of unspent convictions. If individuals had to disclose only what had been included in a disclosure product they would, in effect, be exempt from self-disclosing any childhood convictions, provided that they never had to apply for a disclosure.

The policy intention of the amendments addresses that potential safeguarding gap while providing a truly transformative opportunity for people who have offended in their childhood, which is consistent with the policy thrust of the bill. Through our amendments, the majority of childhood convictions will immediately become spent under the 1974 act. They would therefore not be capable of being disclosed as unspent convictions in either level 1 or level 2 disclosures, and the individual would not have to self-disclose the convictions if an employer were to ask about any past offending behaviour. That change is similar to changes that were made to the self-disclosure rules relating to children’s hearings disposals by the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019.

However, that general provision will be subject to important exceptions. Public protection will be served by provisions that draw a line around the most serious forms of criminality during childhood. That most serious behaviour will remain eligible for state disclosure, and there will be a corresponding duty on the individual, for as long as the conviction remains unspent, to self-disclose such criminality when asked by an employer. The conviction will appear automatically on a level 1 or level 2 disclosure as an unspent childhood conviction. That exception would be for individuals who have a conviction that resulted in a custodial sentence exceeding 48 months—known as an “excluded sentence” under the 1974 act—and, in the case of a sexual offence, a conviction that resulted in a custodial sentence exceeding 12 months.

That approach means that many of the provisions in the bill that relate to childhood convictions for level 1 disclosures can be removed entirely. There will no longer be a decision-making process by ministers in relation to childhood convictions for the purposes of a level 1 disclosure, because the small category of childhood convictions that will remain unspent will be disclosable automatically, without any exercise of discretion, for as long as they are unspent.

The effect of the proposal will be to remove all negative consequences for individuals that were caused by the 1974 act with regard to childhood convictions, save for convictions for the most serious types of offending. Such individuals are a very small minority of all those who are convicted in childhood. The vast majority of childhood convictions will become immediately spent and will not be disclosable, either by the individual or by the state, in any circumstances.

Taken together, the amendments in the group will successfully align the rules on self-disclosure and state disclosure of unspent childhood convictions, and they will deliver the benefit of allowing individuals to move on from their childhood offending behaviour while ensuring a suitable level of public protection for vulnerable groups.

I urge committee members to support the amendments. If members want me to discuss them in more detail, I will be happy to do so.

I move amendment 1.

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

I thank the minister for that explanation. Broadly, the amendments make an awful lot of sense in aligning the bill with other recent legislation, but I want to check my understanding, because I am not a lawyer.

We are talking about how childhood convictions will be treated. The vast majority of childhood convictions, although not the most serious ones, will be immediately spent. I just want clarification on that and to ask whether the minister could explain further. I understand that that will not need ministerial discretion and that a conviction’s not being spent will be by dint of the level of seriousness of the offence.

Is removal of that discretion entirely, along with some of the routes for appeal to the independent reviewer, clear cut? Are we saying that there are no grey areas because of how the law will now work for childhood convictions? My query is whether it is safe to make removal of childhood convictions purely automatic with no ministerial discretion, and safe to remove routes for review and appeal?

Maree Todd

First, the convictions will become spent, and secondly, there will be no grey area. That is reasonable.

We gave a great deal of thought to where the line should be drawn. There is a fine balance to be struck between the policy of helping people to move on from offending and the need to ensure that the disclosure system gives sufficient protection.

As I have said, the changes to the 1974 act are primarily concerned with level 1 disclosures, because there are separate rules for level 2 to ensure protection of vulnerable groups. We need to make provision for a limited set of rules on self-disclosure in order to cover people who have been convicted of the most serious offences. In doing that, we must remember that the same rules have to apply to state disclosure. The more rules we add, the further we would move from ending automatic level 1 disclosure of childhood convictions.

There is no straightforward answer about where to draw the line; I accept that there might be different views about where the balance has been struck. Committee members will agree that the excepted sentences that I propose in the amendments cover very serious offending behaviour. I have carefully balanced that against the principles of article 40.1 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which states the requirement to promote

“the child’s reintegration and the child’s assuming a constructive role in society.”

I am listening to members’ views and will work with them to ensure that we have provisions that allow people to move on from their childhood offences.

Amendment 1 agreed to.

Amendment 2 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 1, as amended, agreed to.

Section 2—Provision of Level 1 disclosures

The Convener

Amendment 3, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 4, 22, 50, 51, 68 to 89, 97, 102, 121, 125, 126, 200, 205 and 206.

Maree Todd

The amendments are grouped as minor and drafting amendments and are primarily intended to assist clarity in reading and understanding the legislation or are a consequence of other amendments.

Amendments 102 and 68 to 88 are minor technical changes that will replace the words “individual” and “scheme member” with “applicant” in the relevant sections. The amendments will support consistency for those following a notional application through processes that are provided for in the legislation.

Amendments 4 and 50 clarify that an individual can apply for a disclosure only in relation to themselves. That will remove potential ambiguity in interpretation of the legislation.

Amendment 3 will insert language that will clarify that ministers can refuse to issue a level 1 disclosure product under the bill when it is more appropriate that the information that would be contained in the disclosure could be obtained in the form of a disclosure product from another competence authority, such as a basic disclosure that is obtained from the Disclosure and Barring Service. The current wording of the bill might have implied that an actual level 1 disclosure product could be obtained from a person other than the Scottish ministers: that is not the case.

09:45  

Amendments 51 and 89, similarly to amendment 3, will insert language to clarify that the purpose of a level 2 disclosure must be one in relation to which the protections against self-disclosure under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 have been excluded by an order that has been made by the Scottish ministers. That means that, when any of the protections were excluded for other purposes by an order that has been made in another part of the United Kingdom, any disclosure application for those purposes should be directed to the appropriate UK disclosure service.

Amendment 22 will introduce wording to make it clear that the definition of “non-disclosable conviction” includes a conviction for a list B offence. Previously, the definition referred only to a list B offence, but it is the existence of a conviction for such an offence that brings a matter within the definition.

Section 29(4)(a), as drafted, is inconsistent in referring to the “purposes” of the disclosure in the plural. All the other provisions refer to a singular “purpose”, and that is what is used in the defined term in section 70. Amendment 97 will bring that reference into line.

Amendment 121 will remove paragraph (c) from section 69 of the bill, which defines what is involved in consideration of suitability. The wording in paragraph (c) was intended to underpin section 57(4) and the provision of advice from an umbrella body to a personal employer. However, in terms of section 57, it is still the personal employer making the suitability assessment and thus they are covered by paragraph (a) of section 69, which renders paragraph (c) unnecessary.

Amendment 125 will substitute for the definition of “spent conviction”, a new definition of “spent” and “unspent” that will apply to all convictions, including childhood convictions and cautions. That will avoid the need to add a separate definition of “spent childhood conviction”. The introduction of a definition of “unspent” in relation to convictions will enable some simplification of the amendments relating to disclosure of childhood convictions in section 1 and the definition of “criminal disposal” in section 13(3).

Amendment 126 provides a definition of “type of regulated role”, which is a phrase that is used in a few places in part 1 of the bill. There is no new definition in broad terms under amendment 126, which simply makes it clear that the definition of the term in the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007 applies for the purpose of the references in part 1 of the bill.

Amendment 200 will amend the PVG act to ensure that the Scottish ministers must issue guidance, and that the chief constable must have regard to that guidance in the exercise of their functions under part 1 and part 2 of the PVG act. The bill currently provides that only in relation to the chief constable’s functions under part 1 of the bill. Amendment 200 will improve consistency in the approach by which information is provided by the chief constable.

Amendments 205 and 206 will fix an error in the drafting of schedule 5, on minor and consequential amendments. The amendments are intended to ensure that the power to make regulations prescribing fees covers applications to renew membership of the scheme and that, if a fee that is prescribed for an application is not paid in the manner that is provided for in the regulations, the application need not be considered. The bill currently makes that amendment in the wrong place in section 70(4) of the PVG act; the amendments will make sure that the amendment is made in the correct place in section 70(4).

I move amendment 3.

Amendment 3 agreed to.

Amendment 4 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 2, as amended, agreed to.

Sections 3 and 4 agreed to.

Section 5—Level 1 disclosures: childhood conviction information

Amendment 5 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 5, as amended, agreed to.

Section 6—Level 1 disclosure: application for review

Amendment 6 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 6, as amended, agreed to.

Section 7—Review of accuracy of information by the Scottish Ministers

Amendment 7 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Amendment 8 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 7, as amended, agreed to.

Section 8—Review of childhood conviction information by the independent reviewer

Amendment 9 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 8, as amended, agreed to.

Section 9—Independent reviewer: information and representations

Amendment 10 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 9, as amended, agreed to.

Section 10—Notification of independent reviewer’s decision

Amendment 11 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 10, as amended, agreed to.

Section 11—Appeal against independent reviewer’s decision

Amendment 12 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 11, as amended, agreed to.

Section 12—Provision of new Level 1 disclosure on conclusion of review proceedings

Amendments 13 to 16 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 12, as amended, agreed to.

Section 13—Level 2 disclosure

Amendment 17 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

The Convener

Amendment 18, in the name of Maree Todd, is grouped with amendments 23, 49, 54 to 57, 59 to 61, 63 to 65, 91, 93 to 96, 99 to 101, 105, 113, and 122 to 124.

Maree Todd

The amendments have been lodged in response to evidence that was given to the committee by a number of groups that have commented on the disclosure of children’s hearings disposals. The bill as introduced treats offending behaviour that has been addressed in the children’s hearings system as a childhood conviction for the purposes of state disclosure. A number of groups have said that that is not in keeping with the ethos of a welfare-based system.

The proposed amendments mean that children’s hearings disposals would not be categorised as convictions for the purposes of the bill but should otherwise be treated in the same way as spent childhood convictions in terms of the rules on when they should be included on a level 2 disclosure. They are treated as spent childhood convictions because the changes that were introduced by the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 mean that all children’s hearings outcomes become spent immediately.

Amendment 122 inserts a definition of “children’s hearing outcome”. It draws on section 3 of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 and therefore ensures a consistent approach to the definition of “conviction” in the bill, which also points to the 1974 act. That approach reflects the link between the system of state disclosure in the bill and the system of self-disclosure in the 1974 act.

Amendment 123 carves “children’s hearing outcome” out of the definition of “conviction”.

Amendment 49 replicates section 14 of the bill, such that we still have provision for children’s hearings outcomes that should be non-disclosable. We do not need to replicate section 14(1)(a) as all children’s hearings outcomes will be immediately spent because of the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019. Amendment 124 is consequential. Amendment 23 deletes section 14(3) as a consequence.

Amendments 18 and 54 add a provision into sections 13 and 17 respectively, which, when read with the consequential amendments 55 to 57, 59 to 61 and 63 to 65, effectively treat children’s hearings outcomes in the same way as spent childhood convictions for disclosure purposes, albeit that they will be clearly badged separately from childhood convictions in any disclosure certificate.

Amendments 91, 93 to 96, 99 to 101, 105 and 113 are consequential and ensure that children’s hearings outcomes are treated in the same way as spent childhood convictions for the purposes of the review and appeals processes, and for the purpose of the power in section 40 to modify other disclosure enactments.

I move amendment 18.

Amendment 18 agreed to.

The Convener

Group 4 is on level 2 disclosure: other relevant information. Amendment 19, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 66, 67 and 203.

Maree Todd

The amendments relate to the disclosure of other relevant information—ORI—on a level 2 disclosure and as vetting information for the purpose of the protecting vulnerable groups scheme.

Amendment 19 provides that ORI from an overseas police force is a category of information that may be disclosed on a level 2 disclosure. The amendment ensures that overseas ORI can continue to be disclosed as is currently the case under the Police Act 1997 and the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007.

Section 18 of the bill already permits ORI that is provided by the chief constable of Police Scotland to be included in a level 2 disclosure. The Scottish Government will use a section 104 order under the Scotland Act 1998 to replicate the bill provisions for ORI provided from other UK police forces, so that the same applies to the chief officers of police forces across the rest of the UK. However, that order will not be able to deal with the disclosure of ORI from overseas police forces. Amendment 19, together with amendment 67, will address that issue.

Subsection (1) of amendment 67 places a duty on the Scottish ministers, before providing a level 2 disclosure to an applicant, to request the chief officer of every relevant overseas police force to provide ORI that meets the two-part test. The Scottish ministers cannot compel the chief officer of an overseas police force to engage in a statutory review process. It would not be within the competence of the Scottish Parliament to legislate for Scottish ministers to do so.

Together, subsections (2) and (4) of the amendment provide that overseas ORI may be included in a level 2 disclosure only following a direct review to the independent reviewer, including, if taken, an appeal to a sheriff against the independent reviewer’s decision.

Subsection (5) of amendment 67 provides the Scottish ministers with the power to make regulations about the procedural aspects of the direct review. That includes the opportunity for the applicant to make representation to the independent reviewer and an appeal to a sheriff against the independent reviewer’s decision. Under the existing disclosure legislation, ORI from overseas police forces is very rare. Given how infrequently we anticipate that the review process will be utilised in practice, the procedural aspects of the review process are considered to be too detailed to be in the bill.

Subsection (6) provides a power to prescribe “relevant overseas police forces”, in keeping with the approach under the existing law.

Amendment 66 inserts new subsections into section 18. The amendment clarifies that information relating to a time when the applicant was under 12 years of age can be provided by the police as ORI only after a determination has been made by the independent reviewer under the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. That reflects similar provisions that the ACR act inserted into the disclosure provisions of the Police Act 1997 and the PVG act, which will now be superseded and repealed by the disclosure provisions in the bill.

Amendment 203 is a consequential amendment to the PVG act. Section 97(5) of the PVG act defines “relevant police forces” with reference to the Police Act 1997. As the bill repeals that act, it is necessary to substitute the reference to it with reference to section 50(7) of the bill. The range of relevant police forces remains the same, which ensures that the arrangements under the PVG act for obtaining ORI as vetting information remain the same.

I move amendment 19.

The Convener

Do any members wish to come in?

Daniel Johnson

I have a bit of a speculative question. Initially, I was concerned that the amendments cast a very wide net by talking about overseas police forces, so I read and reread the section.

Then I realised that those overseas police forces will be defined as the ones in the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and so on. However, that gave rise to a question. I accept that a line has had to be drawn on what can be done practically, but given that Police Scotland has access to intelligence systems such as that of Interpol, what consideration did the Government give to intelligence and information that Police Scotland might hold or be able to access but which have been gained from police forces beyond the overseas police forces as they will be defined in the bill?

10:00  

Maree Todd

For clarity, are you talking about information that is accessible to Police Scotland, in relation to which disclosure would be for Police Scotland in the circumstances that we are talking about?

Daniel Johnson

It struck me that an individual might well have committed offences or have come into contact with police forces outside the jurisdictions of the forces that are set out in amendment 67. Such information might be of concern and relevant, given the considerations, but it will not be caught by the provisions of the bill. Given that the Government has expanded the number of police forces and jurisdictions from which Police Scotland can draw disclosable information—albeit that it has done so only to include the Channel Islands and so on—was consideration given to looking at conviction information from other jurisdictions, as part of the work that went into this group of amendments?

Maree Todd

Yes, it was. Overseas information goes through a single police force in the UK—Hampshire Constabulary—and is then used in the system, as is described in the legislation.

Daniel Johnson

That was a helpful clarification.

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

Also on a point of clarification, if someone was applying for disclosure and other relevant information had been provided, and if they had the opportunity to have the appropriateness of the information reviewed, would they know the source of the information?

Maree Todd

Yes, they would.

Jamie Greene

Those were interesting comments. If information is not captured through the relevant authority—I think that you said that that is the Hampshire force, minister—and, after disclosure, further information comes to light, perhaps from a police force that is not linked to the system, what powers of revocation will be available?

Maree Todd

Such a situation will be covered by the on-going monitoring requirements of PVG scheme membership.

Amendment 19 agreed to.

Amendments 20 and 21 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 13, as amended, agreed to.

Section 14—Non-disclosable convictions

Amendments 22 and 23 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 14, as amended, agreed to.

Schedule 1—List A offences

The Convener

We move to the next group, “List A and List B offences: miscellaneous amendments”. Amendment 24, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 25 to 35 and 37 to 48.

Maree Todd

The amendments in the group relate to the offence lists in schedules 1 and 2 of the bill. They are also known as lists A and B.

Convictions for offences in schedules 1 and 2 will continue to be disclosed in level 2 disclosures until a successful review or, in the case of a conviction for an offence that is listed in schedule 2, an offence becomes non-disclosable under section 14.

The amendments update the offence lists in the schedules with recently amended or newly created statutory offences. The amendments to schedules 1 and 2 also respond to requests from the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service and on behalf of the Judicial Appointments Board for Scotland that offences relating to dishonesty, the administration of justice and integrity be moved to schedule 1. The changes cover dishonesty offences against an individual, breach of trust or responsibility, and misconduct in a position of authority. Moving those offences from list B to list A will mean that they are disclosable for longer, even after they are spent, which is intended to promote the integrity of the justice system in Scotland.

Separately, a number of recently amended or newly created statutory offences have recently received royal assent and warrant inclusion on the offence lists. They have been situated in the lists alongside similar offences that are currently in schedule 1 or 2, taking into account the factors that are described in paragraph 119 of the policy memorandum.

I move amendment 24.

Amendment 24 agreed to.

Amendments 25 to 35 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

The Convener

Group 6 is on “PVG Act: carrying out a regulated role without being a scheme member”. Amendment 36, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 146 to 149.

Maree Todd

The amendments in the group relate to offences to be inserted into the 2007 act by the bill, in connection with the mandatory PVG scheme.

Amendment 36 is consequential, so, although it leads the group, I will discuss it last.

Amendment 146 removes the words “seek or” from the offence in new section 45C(1) that is to be inserted into the 2007 act by section 74 of the bill. That is necessary to make it clear that the act of applying for a job before being a scheme member will not be regarded as a criminal offence. The amendment does not adversely impact on the requirement for those carrying out a regulated role to be in the mandatory PVG scheme. It will also be an offence for an individual to agree to carry out a regulated role without being a PVG scheme member.

Amendment 147 inserts a new provision into new section 45C of the 2007 act. In relation to the offence under 45C(1) of agreeing to carry out a regulated role without being a scheme member, the amendment makes it clear that an individual is not deemed to have agreed to carry out a regulated role if that agreement is subject to the individual joining the PVG scheme for that role. There is a similar provision in new section 45D(2) for employers, and it is only right that the same treatment is extended to individuals, so that they may apply for a role without being a scheme member, although they may agree to take up employment and start in the role only once they have successfully joined the scheme.

Amendment 148 provides the Scottish ministers with a regulation-making power to prohibit organisations from permitting an individual to carry out a regulated role and to require organisations to remove an individual from a regulated role, when the individual is not a scheme member. That is to address organisations continuing to employ someone to carry out a regulated role when that person is not or is no longer a scheme member. Regulations may impose prohibitions or requirements in relation to particular types of organisations or in relation to particular kinds of regulated roles. Section 45DA(3) makes it an offence for an organisation to fail to

“comply with regulations made under subsection (1)”,

although it will be a defence for an organisation to prove that it did not know, and could not reasonably be expected to have known, that the individual was not a scheme member.

Amendment 148 ensures that there will be an onus on organisations to check whether their employees remain scheme members. It ensures that there is a consequence for any organisation that does nothing following receipt of a notification under the new section 45B, which states that a scheme member’s membership has lapsed.

Under the bill, as introduced, when a scheme member’s membership has lapsed and they continue to carry out a regulated role, only the individual would be committing an offence. Amendment 148 means that there would be an equivalent offence for organisations that fail to comply with any prohibition or requirement imposed by regulations.

Amendment 149 applies the same penalties to the new offence created by amendment 148, and they are set out in the new section 45F of the 2007 act. That is appropriate, as all the offences that are introduced by section 74 of the bill deal with the same conduct, namely evading the mandatory PVG scheme.

The offences in the new sections 45C, 45D and 45E, which are inserted by the bill into the 2007 act, are all included in the list of offences in schedule 1—the list A offences, which can continue to be disclosed on level 2 disclosures, even after they are spent.

For consistency, amendment 36 adds the new offence that is proposed by amendment 148 to schedule 1.

I move amendment 36.

Iain Gray

I might be at fault for not reading properly, and I accept that you alluded to the matter, but I want more clarity on the sanctions that would be available when those powers are used against an organisation that has continued to use individuals in regulated roles without membership of the scheme.

Maree Todd

As I said, amendment 149 applies the same penalties to the new offence that is created by amendment 148. The sanctions that we are introducing today align with the sanctions to which I previously alluded.

New section 45F sets out the penalties for offences relating to regulated roles performed by individuals who are not in the scheme. It says:

“A person who commits an offence under section 45C, 45D or 45E is liable ... on summary conviction, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum (or both)”

or

“on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 5 years or a fine (or both)”.

Iain Gray

Presumably, in the case of the organisation or employer, rather than the individual, that would apply to the legal entity of the organisation, depending on what its structure was.

Maree Todd

There is a provision in the 2007 act concerning corporate offences, which is where that would apply.

Jamie Greene

Please accept my apologies if this matter was covered at stage 1, but how much of a shift in the status quo does the introduction of those new penalties represent? Does it give ministers additional powers to hold organisations to account more than individuals, or does it give them greater powers to create offences that concern individuals rather than the umbrella organisations within which they sit?

What parliamentary scrutiny would be afforded to the committee or the Parliament when ministers create the regulations under new section 45DA?

Finally, what guidance would be given to organisations that are perhaps currently made up of a mix of PVG and non-PVG personnel? Will there be any changes in their perception of how the regulations will affect them? Could you specifically address concerns about changes in the law?

Maree Todd

The balance between the individual and the organisation is pretty similar. The requirements are introduced by the fact of the scheme becoming mandatory. A great deal of guidance will be issued to ensure that everybody is aware of the change that is coming and what duties are required.

Reminders will also be built into the system. Our intention is not to criminalise a large number of people, but to have a secure scheme that is easily operable and understood by the general public. We will endeavour to deliver that.

Did you also ask about scrutiny of guidance?

Jamie Greene

Yes. If, for example, ministers change the details of the types of organisation or roles that the offences cover, what scrutiny will be afforded to those decisions?

Maree Todd

They will be regulations made under the negative procedure.

Jamie Greene

Thank you.

Amendment 36 agreed to.

Schedule 1, as amended, agreed to.

Schedule 2—List B offences

10:15  

Amendments 37 to 48 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Schedule 2, as amended, agreed to.

After section 14

Amendment 49 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 15—Provision of Level 2 disclosures

Amendment 50 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 15, as amended, agreed to.

Section 16—Level 2 disclosure applications: countersigning and purposes

Amendment 51 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 16, as amended, agreed to.

Section 17—Level 2 disclosures: childhood conviction information

Amendments 52 to 65 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 17, as amended, agreed to.

Section 18—Provision of relevant police information

Amendment 66 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 18, as amended, agreed to.

After section 18

Amendment 67 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 19—Further information for certain purposes: non-PVG scheme members

Amendments 68 to 80 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 19, as amended, agreed to.

Section 20—Further information for certain purposes: PVG scheme members

Amendments 81 to 88 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 20, as amended, agreed to.

Section 21 agreed to.

Section 22—Level 2 disclosures: Crown employment

Amendment 89 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 22, as amended, agreed to.

Section 23—Level 2 disclosure: application for review

Amendments 90 and 91 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 23, as amended, agreed to.

Section 24 agreed to.

Section 25—Review of childhood conviction information by the independent reviewer

Amendments 92 to 96 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 25, as amended, agreed to.

Sections 26 to 28 agreed to.

Section 29—Review of removable convictions by the independent reviewer

Amendment 97 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 29, as amended, agreed to.

Section 30 agreed to.

Section 31—Independent reviewer: information and representations

Amendments 98 to 102 moved——[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 31, as amended, agreed to.

Section 32 agreed to.

Section 33—Appeal against independent reviewer’s decision

The Convener

The next group is on “Level 2 disclosure: process after independent review”. Amendment 103, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendment 104 and amendments 106 to 110.

Maree Todd

The amendments seek to introduce a right to subsequent review for disclosure applicants when there was a previous decision to include information. That ability—which was recommended by the committee at stage 1—will be provided through amendment 106.

The purpose of section 33(5), as originally drafted, was to ensure that, following a successful review, the same information would be excluded from a subsequent level 2 disclosure. However, its effect would have meant that there was no recourse to subsequent review of the inclusion. Amendment 106 will allow such a subsequent review in appropriate circumstances.

Amendments 103, 104, 107 and 108 relate to the chief constable’s right of appeal against a decision by the independent reviewer and how that would affect the timescale for the reviewing process coming to an end. When the chief constable has a right to appeal to the sheriff against the decision of the independent reviewer to remove ORI from a level 2 disclosure, the chief constable can inform ministers that they will not be pursuing such an appeal and therefore allow the earlier conclusion of review proceedings. That mirrors the existing ability in the bill for the applicant to notify ministers that they do not intend to pursue an appeal.

Amendment 109 is consequential to amendment 110. Together, the amendments relate to how information that is removed after a review is treated for the purposes of the PVG scheme. Amendment 110 will introduce language clarifying that ministers must remove the information from the applicant’s scheme record and that the excluded information will no longer amount to vetting information within the meaning of section 49(1) of the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007. The significance of that is that vetting information can trigger a consideration for listing under section 12 of the 2007 act. Amendment 110 will ensure that the information that has been removed from a level 2 disclosure following the review process cannot be used to commence a consideration for listing.

I move amendment 103.

Amendment 103 agreed to.

Amendments 104 and 105 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 33, as amended, agreed to.

Section 34—Provision of new Level 2 disclosure on conclusion of review proceedings

Amendments 106 to 110 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 34, as amended, agreed to.

After section 34

The Convener

The next group is on “Level 2 disclosure: spent childhood convictions and children’s hearing outcomes: disapplication of section 4 of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974”. Amendment 111, in the name of the minister, is the only amendment in the group.

Maree Todd

Amendment 111 seeks to insert a new section into the bill. It is modelled on section 8 of the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. The amendment provides that, for any referral to the independent reviewer made under section 25 of the bill in respect of spent childhood convictions or children’s hearings outcomes, the protections against self-disclosure under section 4 of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 would be disapplied for the purpose of that referral, including any appeal to a sheriff under section 33.

In broad terms, that means that a person who has asked for a review has to answer questions and provide information about their spent childhood convictions or their children’s hearing outcomes for the purposes of the review process.

I move amendment 111.

Amendment 111 agreed to.

The Convener

The next group is on “Disclosures: principles for decision making”. Amendment 112, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 208, 221 and 202.

Maree Todd

These amendments have been lodged in response to feedback from stakeholders and the committee’s recommendation in its stage 1 report on including a set of guiding principles or criteria in the bill for the application of the two-part test for inclusion of certain information in disclosure certificates. In particular, I thank Daniel Johnson for his close scrutiny of the matter. The fact that we have both lodged amendments that seek to achieve similar policy outcomes demonstrates that the Scottish Government has listened and responded to his calls for more detail on the two-part test to be in the bill.

Amendment 112 provides two lists of matters that may be taken into account when the two-part test is applied by the Scottish ministers, the independent reviewer or the chief constable for the various purposes to which it applies in the bill. The matters listed are based on and seek to reflect the factors that have been highlighted in significant case law. As there are two parts to the test—whether something is “relevant” and whether something “ought to be included”—there is considerable overlap between subsections (2) and (3) of the new section that is added by this amendment. That aspect is already acknowledged in the case law on which the factors are based.

There is broad discretion for decision makers about how to take account of those matters in practice. Subsections (2) and (3) are both framed as matters that may be taken into account. There is no duty to take account of all the matters that are listed. That is particularly important, as not every factor will necessarily be pertinent to every decision that is made under the two-part test and we do not want to create a duty for decision makers to have to consider or rule out every factor. Such an outcome could prolong the disclosure application process, which is a situation that the Scottish Government is keen to avoid.

Subsections (2) and (3) also provide that the matters that are listed in each subsection are non-exhaustive. That ensures that other relevant matters can be taken into account, so that the discretion of the decision maker is not fettered. That is vital in the context of the guidance that will be developed in collaboration with stakeholders. I am certain that stakeholders will have views on other factors that should form part of the decision-making process and will want them to be part of the guidance. It is crucial that the provisions do not shackle that engagement and the guidance or prevent decision makers from taking a targeted approach to each case that is before them.

Subsection (4) explains that references to “other information” mean ORI.

Subsection (5) enables both sets of matters to be amended by secondary legislation. That regulation-making power will come under section 87(4) of the bill and will therefore be subject to the negative procedure. The Scottish Government considers that to be appropriate, as it will allow ministers to respond quickly and flexibly to any significant developments in case law.

Amendment 202 extends the application of new decision-making factors in amendment 112 when the chief constable is considering the same two-part test in relation to the provision of ORI for inclusion in a person’s scheme record under the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007.

In addition, the independent reviewer applies the same two-part test under the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 in relation to a decision about the inclusion of pre-12 behaviour as ORI in the disclosure certificate.

Amendment 204, in my name, which we will come to in a later group, will ensure that the decision-making principles are applied consistently across all three pieces of legislation.

I urge members to accept the amendments in my name in this group.

As I said, Daniel Johnson’s amendments would achieve similar policy outcomes to my amendments. There are two main areas of difference. First, amendment 208 would impose a duty on decision makers to

“have regard to the matters in subsections (4) and (5)”

whereas amendment 112 gives them discretion about which matters to take into account. The Scottish Government considers that allowing that flexibility is more appropriate, as not all the matters will necessarily be relevant to every decision.

The second issue on which we take a different view is the manner in which the decision-making principles can be amended through secondary legislation. Daniel Johnson proposes in amendment 221 that the matters will be amendable by affirmative procedure, whereas my amendment proposes that they be amendable by negative procedure.

Essentially, the regulation-making power is an administrative function of ministers. To ensure that the principles keep pace with any development in jurisprudence, we consider it appropriate to have that power subject to the negative procedure. The default rule in section 87(4) of the bill would therefore apply.

I ask Daniel Johnson not to move amendment 208. I hope that he can see that I have taken into account his close scrutiny of the issue, and that the amendments in my name address his concerns about the two-part test. Moreover, my amendments are all connected and ensure that the decision-making principles are applied equally across the bill, the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007.

I urge members to support amendment 112 and all my other amendments in this group. Should members be required to vote, I ask them to reject Daniel Johnson’s amendments in the group.

I move amendment 112.

10:30  

Daniel Johnson

I thank the minister for acknowledging the issues that I have raised and for meeting me to discuss those matters.

I will be relatively brief. As the minister has pointed out, her amendments and mine largely do the same work and have the same effect, so I will not move amendments 208 and 221.

It is important to put the principles in the bill in order to provide clarity and certainty, and the amendments in the minister’s name achieve important flexibility. It is important to recognise that these matters cannot be rigid and that they will evolve. Therefore, it is important that whatever we do in that regard reflects that, which the minister’s amendments do.

I will make two small points. First, as an Opposition back bencher, I will always advocate the use of the affirmative procedure over the use of the negative procedure. There is an important and substantive point in that regard. Given how the decisions will be made, I think it important to ensure that there is adequate parliamentary scrutiny of the principles should ministers propose to alter them. However, that is essentially a matter of detail, which I will certainly not die in a ditch over today.

Secondly—this point is more one of reflection—I was interested to note similarities between the minister’s amendments and mine. One slight difference is that my amendments expand on the materiality decisions. Subsection (4)(a) of amendment 208 elaborates on the material considerations in relation to the nature of the conviction, and I recognise that subsection (2)(a) of the minister’s amendment 112 provides largely the same thing.

However, I wonder whether my elaboration is helpful in relation to the nature of the crimes that are considered. The test whether something is “relevant” is, I think, essentially about whether the materiality—the nature—of the crime is relevant to the considerations at hand, whereas whether something “ought to be included” is about whether it is pertinent to disclose the circumstances.

I am not of a fixed view that the elaboration necessarily makes my proposed amendments significantly better, but I wanted to highlight it as a point of difference, and it may be something to consider at stage 3. Otherwise, I am happy with the Government’s amendments, and I will not move mine.

Maree Todd

We can certainly expand on the points that Daniel Johnson has raised in the guidance that we produce. I am more than happy to work with him between now and stage 3 to make sure that we arrive at something that we are all happy with.

Amendment 112 agreed to.

Sections 35 to 39 agreed to.

Section 40—Childhood information: power to modify other enactments

Amendment 113 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 40, as amended, agreed to.

Sections 41 to 50 agreed to.

Section 51—Removal of registration on other grounds

The Convener

The next group deals with accredited bodies. Amendment 114, in the name of Maree Todd, is grouped with amendments 115 to 120.

Maree Todd

The amendments relate to the role of accredited bodies. Amendments 114 and 115 introduce a sanction: the removal from the register of an accredited body that does not comply with the duty to have a lead signatory. A duty without such a sanction would render the provisions in section 51 less effective.

Amendment 118 gives an applicant for registration in the register of accredited bodies the power to nominate one or more countersignatories instead of requiring it to nominate countersignatories.

Amendments 116 and 117 are consequential drafting amendments. They ensure that the existing duty under the bill to nominate a lead signatory remains in place, while accommodating the conversion of the duty to nominate countersignatories into a power to do so.

Amendment 119 is a consequential amendment. It removes sections 52(8) and 52(9). Section 52(8) imposed a requirement to have at least one countersignatory, but given that the only duty will now be to have a lead signatory at all times, with a power to nominate countersignatories, that subsection is not appropriate. Section 52(9) is redundant, as the definition of lead signatory under section 52(1) makes it clear that the lead signatory has authority to act as a countersignatory.

Amendment 120 reframes the duty on an accredited body acting as an umbrella body when it is deciding what information may be shared with an organisational employer. Instead of requiring the accredited body to be satisfied that the individual is suitable to have access to the information, the accredited body will need to be satisfied that disclosure to that person would comply with the code of practice that will be published under section 56. That will make it clearer to accredited bodies what is expected of them.

I move amendment 114.

Amendment 114 agreed to.

Amendment 115 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 51, as amended, agreed to.

Section 52—Lead signatories and countersignatories

Amendments 116 to 119 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 52, as amended, agreed to.

Sections 53 to 56 agreed to.

Section 57—Sharing of Level 2 disclosure information by accredited bodies

Amendment 120 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 57, as amended, agreed to.

Sections 58 to 63 agreed to.

After section 63

Amendment 208 not moved.

Sections 64 to 68 agreed to.

Section 69—Definition of consideration of suitability

Amendment 121 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 69, as amended, agreed to.

Section 70—Interpretation of Part 1

Amendments 122 to 126 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 70, as amended, agreed to.

The Convener

That ends day 1 of consideration of the bill at stage 2. Our next meeting will be on Wednesday 11 March, and our target is to complete this stage of the bill on that day. Any further amendments to the remaining provisions of the bill must be lodged with the clerks in the legislation team by 12 noon on Thursday 5 March.

10:41 Meeting continued in private until 11:07.  

4 March 2020

Second meeting on amendments

Documents with the amendments considered at this meeting on 11 March 2020:

Video Thumbnail Preview PNG

Second meeting on amendments transcript

The Convener

Agenda item 3 is stage 2 proceedings on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. I welcome to the committee Alex Cole-Hamilton MSP and Liz Smith MSP, who might contribute to the proceedings but will not have a vote. I also welcome Maree Todd, who is the Minister for Children and Young People, and her officials. Everyone should have a copy of the bill, the marshalled list of amendments, which sets out the amendments in the order in which they will be debated, and the groupings of amendments.

Section 71—Participation in Scheme

The Convener

The first group of amendments is on the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007: participation of persons ages 12 to 15 in the scheme. Amendment 209, in the name of Jamie Greene, is grouped with amendments 210 to 212.

Jamie Greene (West Scotland) (Con)

I ask members to bear with me, because I did not participate in the stage 1 proceedings, but I have done my homework and I thank my colleague Liz Smith for working with me on handing over some of that work.

This group of amendments seeks to strike a balance on the evidence that was heard at stage 1 and the concerns that a number of stakeholders raised, including the third sector and voluntary organisations, which have been in touch since I joined the committee.

Members will recall that, during the stage 1 evidence, several witnesses raised concerns about the bill’s proposal to implement a mandatory protection of vulnerable groups scheme membership for those aged 16 or over who “carry out regulated roles”. Several witnesses were concerned that, under the current proposals, by setting 16 as the minimum age for obtaining disclosure, those who are under 16 might be unable to obtain a PVG, although they can currently get one. Members might be aware that around 300 people under the age of 16 are currently part of the scheme and undertake what might be considered as regulated roles.

To put together some evidence on that, I spoke to a number of organisations that got in touch and would like me to express the following comments from them. I will pass the quotes to the Official Report afterwards. The first is from Interest Link Borders, which said:

“Volunteering organisations like ourselves will not involve anyone who might have a criminal record in regulated roles, unless they have a PVG membership. So the actual result of the bill will be to prevent those under 16 being in regulated roles.”

The Scottish Volunteering Forum, which a number of members work with, noted other concerns:

“Given that there is a proposal to make the PVG scheme membership legally mandatory for doing regulated roles, a lot of organisations would interpret that as meaning that people under the age of 16 would no longer be able to do any voluntary work with voluntary groups.”

A third organisation, the Royal Yachting Association, which does a great deal of good work in my region, got in touch to say:

“There is a lack of clarity in the messages from the information being promoted. We believe the contradiction between a club being required to ensure that a volunteer is a scheme member, if the role is regulated, and an under-16-year-old undertaking a similar role not being permitted to join the scheme, will create confusion. This could well deter clubs like ours from involving young volunteers and as a consequence adversely affect the opportunities for young people instructing and coaching our club-based activities, as well as those of other sports with similar developmental roles.”

When my colleagues and I approached the issue of the spectrum of possibilities for a mandatory scheme for those who are over 12 and under 16, we found a middle ground that would give ministers the ability to allow under-16s to carry out a regulated role if it appears to ministers

“from the information contained in the application that it is appropriate”

for them

“to participate in the Scheme.”

That is the rationale behind amendment 209. It would give Disclosure Scotland the flexibility to allow under-16s to apply to participate in the PVG scheme in specific circumstances. It would not involve a blanket or mandatory reduction of the minimum age, but it would allow organisations some flexibility if they would like an extra level of vetting of their young volunteers, as is currently the case, and thereby give them the reassurance that under-16s can undertake regulated roles.

I move amendment 209.

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

I very much understand the reason for amendment 209. Voluntary work is hugely important, as is young people’s involvement in voluntary work. However, I have a number of concerns about Jamie Greene’s amendments. First and foremost, the bill is intended to deal with regulated roles and is structured as such. Roles that require to be regulated are those that permit, and necessarily require, unsupervised access to vulnerable adults and children. Therefore, the question that occurs to me is whether it is ever appropriate for people who are under the age of 16 to have such unsupervised access, in particular to children.

Based on what Mr Greene said, we are mainly talking about coaching and other sporting and leisure activities. In those circumstances, the key question is who is providing the supervision of the activities? As the amendments are set out, my understanding is that the supervision would be provided by someone who is over the age of 16 and is a member of the PVG scheme, which would still permit people under the age of 16 to be involved. However, the reverse of that situation—permitting someone under the age of 16 who is not so supervised, whether or not they are in the PVG scheme—is questionable in my view. Although I understand the motivation for the amendments, they run contrary to the intention of the bill and potentially allow for a practice that I question the advisability of having in the first place. I hope that that makes sense.

Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green)

I echo much of what Daniel Johnson has said. I have a couple of questions for Jamie Greene and one for the minister.

I would appreciate further details, as I am still not entirely clear on the scenarios or roles for which Jamie Greene imagines that a minister would judge it appropriate that a 12 to 15 year-old should be a member of the PVG scheme. Why is the PVG scheme appropriate for those young people? We heard that proportionality is key to this debate. PVG is a system of on-going monitoring, so why not have another disclosure product rather than the PVG scheme?

Mr Greene very fairly mentioned the confusion around the participation of under-16s in what would otherwise be regulated work, and we took evidence on that issue. My concern is that, were Mr Greene’s amendments to be agreed to and that system introduced, it would create further confusion. We would have some 12 to 15-year-olds who are in the PVG scheme and some who are not. Therefore, there would be further lack of clarity over who could and could not participate in that kind of work.

I would appreciate it if the minister could provide some absolute clarity around the committee’s recommendation on the matter. The committee struggled to come to a clear conclusion, because the evidence was relatively finely balanced. However, we concluded that we would ask the Government to ensure that, after an initial period of operation of the new scheme, a review is conducted into the participation rate of under-16s. If the minister makes it clear that that will definitely take place, I urge Jamie Greene not to press his amendments.

The Minister for Children and Young People (Maree Todd)

I understand the intention behind Jamie Greene’s amendments, and I appreciate the committee’s close scrutiny at stage 1 of the introduction of a minimum age. However, in response to Ross Greer’s point, I say that I do not think that it is ever appropriate for children who are under 16 to be subject to on-going monitoring, and it is generally not appropriate to subject them to criminal record checks. The bill’s approach to the disclosure of childhood behaviour will mean that very few disclosures will contain information on children in that age range, which will have direct consequences for disclosure applicants who are under 18.

As I previously highlighted to the committee, when children might pose a risk that could have led to disclosure there are other, more appropriate, measures available to manage that. Evidence from organisations such as the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities and Police Scotland echoed the view that bringing children back into the PVG scheme is not a suitable response to manage that risk. As has been repeatedly highlighted by stakeholders, care-experienced children are disproportionately represented in the justice and children’s hearings systems. That means that any impact of children being asked to join the PVG scheme would fall hardest on that group. We have heard from Who Cares? Scotland that young people already self-exclude from opportunities due to disclosure requirements.

I share the committee’s concern that children could be denied volunteering opportunities. However, it is already the case that voluntary organisations do not routinely allow children to undertake regulated roles without being supervised. My view is that introducing a minimum age for PVG scheme membership will encourage organisations to build on those good working practices, while also opening doors to children who might otherwise not participate. I want to stress that the perceived risk of organisations misinterpreting the change should be handled through training and guidance—not by continuing to subject children to on-going criminal record checks as part of the PVG scheme. Again, I am happy to provide my assurance that the Scottish Government will communicate on that to ensure that children are not disadvantaged in gaining volunteering opportunities.

Amendments 209 and 210 risk introducing uncertainty for children and organisations as to when they should or could seek PVG scheme membership for children, and they could create inconsistencies in approaches across the country. As the committee knows, a key element of the bill is to introduce a mandatory PVG scheme for those who are carrying out regulated roles. That means that, unlike level 1 and level 2 disclosures, those aged 16 and over and doing regulated roles must be in the scheme. To suggest that some children, or some roles that are undertaken by children, should be in the PVG scheme but others should not risks creating confusion that some roles in the scheme are more regulated than others.

A two-tier scheme might also be created if adult scheme membership were mandatory and childhood scheme membership were discretionary. That undermines the policy aim of the mandatory scheme. It would also compromise the training and guidance that we can provide as part of the transition to the mandatory scheme, and it might result in more organisations requesting scheme membership for 12 to 15-year-olds than do at present, as a precautionary measure.

I am also concerned about the amendments to the offence provisions. The effect of amendment 211 is to amend section 45C(3) of the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007, which is inserted by section 74 of the bill, to apply the offence of doing a regulated role without being a scheme member to 12 to 15-year-olds in circumstances in which ministers have permitted them to be in the PVG scheme. However, as section 45C applies only to those who carry out or agree to carry out a regulated role while not a scheme member, and the 12 to 15-year-olds who would participate in the scheme under Jamie Greene’s proposed new subsection (4) of section 45 would be scheme members, the amendment would have no effect. Under-16s still would not need to be scheme members to carry out regulated roles unless they had already been accepted into the scheme. That seems circular.

The effect of amendment 212, which amends section 45D(3) of the PVG act, which is inserted by section 74 of the bill, is to apply the offence of employing someone who is not a scheme member to do a regulated role to an organisation that offers a regulated role to a child aged 12 to 15, when ministers have permitted the child to be in the PVG scheme under section 45 participation in the scheme. However, as new section 45D will apply only to the offering of a regulated role without confirming scheme membership, and Jamie Greene’s proposed new subsection (4) of section 45 would involve an organisation seeking scheme membership for a child aged 12 to 15, amendment 212 would have no effect in this respect.

10:15  

I am proud that Scotland has the PVG scheme, which provides not only the snapshot disclosure of criminal record that is offered by Police Act disclosures but the on-going monitoring of people who come into contact with the most vulnerable in society. That is why the Scottish Government is ensuring that it can offer more robust support to safeguarding through the bill.

However, there is a reason why other countries have a minimum age for state disclosure. That is because, as we have frequently seen in the Scottish Parliament, it is appropriate to treat children differently from how adults are treated.

We are in the unusual situation in which a Conservative member is arguing for continued divergence from the rest of the United Kingdom and the Scottish Government is arguing for our remaining aligned with the rest of the UK. It is already the case in the rest of the UK that organisations cannot obtain standard and enhanced disclosures on children under 16. Those changes were made some time ago—back in 2012—in England and Wales by the Disclosure and Barring Service, and in 2015 in Northern Ireland. The changes were made in recognition of concerns about compatibility with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

In response to Ross Greer’s concerns, I can say that the Government is more than happy to work with bodies that represent volunteers in Scotland to see whether there is a change in the level of volunteering, as I said at stage 1. There has not been a detectable change in volunteering rates since the changes were made in the rest of the UK.

I understand the significance of children and young people’s volunteering; indeed, children and young people volunteer at about twice the rate at which adults do. Volunteering is important not only for children but for Scotland and we must ensure that children continue to volunteer. We must not introduce barriers to children volunteering. As I said, I would not want any child to be denied the opportunity to volunteer because of the stigma associated with a disclosure, and I am concerned that subjecting children to the PVG scheme could present barriers.

I ask Jamie Greene not to press amendment 209 and not to move any other amendment in the group, for the reasons that I set out. If he presses amendment 209 and moves the other amendments, I ask the committee to resist the amendments.

Jamie Greene

I thank members for their helpful and constructive comments and feedback. I agree with Daniel Johnson that there are questions about whether it is appropriate for under-16s to be in unsupervised situations in regulated roles. However, the reality is that a number of young people who already participate in a form of PVG scheme membership might be in that situation—it is impossible to cover all scenarios. We often talk about the ideal world, in which that would never happen, but it might happen. My point is that the volunteer organisations that got in touch said that they have young people under 16 in that situation, performing the same role as people over 16 perform. They asked what we are doing about such young people.

I thank Ross Greer for his feedback. He mentioned other disclosure schemes—he perhaps has the benefit of understanding such approaches better than I do. If there are other options for under-16s and organisations would like that additional comfort in relation to specific roles, so be it. It would be helpful to know what those options are and for that to be communicated to voluntary organisations, which might not be aware of them.

I thank the minister, who made some very helpful comments. I think that we all share the view that volunteering is extremely positive and we want to encourage it. The amendments in this group are not intended to create confusion; they are trying to address confusion that currently exists. If volunteer organisations are saying that they might interpret the bill as meaning that people under 16 can no longer do voluntary work with vulnerable groups, we need to listen.

The point of these amendments is not to create confusion but to provide clarification where confusion currently exists. In response to Ross Greer’s question on what happens after the bill is passed, I say that this is stage 2 and we have an opportunity to better communicate with the voluntary sector about the consequences of the bill for them and those who are under 16 and currently volunteer for those organisations. If there is confusion, let us listen to their feedback and respond positively with clarification.

I do not want to create further confusion. On the basis that the minister is happy to work with me and other members to ensure that some progress is made before we get to stage 3 and to provide reassurance to those organisations, I will withdraw amendment 209 and will not move the other amendments.

Amendment 209, by agreement, withdrawn.

Amendment 210 not moved.

Section 71 agreed to.

Section 72—Duration of Scheme membership

The Convener

The next group is on the PVG act and the renewal of scheme membership. Amendment 127, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 128 to 145.

Maree Todd

In written evidence to the committee, the Scottish Social Services Council highlighted its need to be notified of any change to a member’s status in the PVG scheme. I am pleased to move several amendments that ensure that regulatory bodies are notified when a scheme member’s membership is due to lapse and where they have failed to renew membership. Having reviewed the provisions, I have also lodged amendments that will further enhance safeguarding for individuals who employ PVG scheme members in the context of personal arrangements, where an organisation is not involved, such as an individual who is arranging their own personal care through self-directed support and employs a PVG scheme member to carry out a regulated role for them. The amendments allow ministers to notify individuals of changes to the membership status of their employee.

I move amendment 127.

Amendment 127 agreed to.

Amendments 128 to 134 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 72, as amended, agreed to.

Section 73—Failure to apply for renewal of Scheme membership

Amendments 135 to 145 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 73, as amended, agreed to.

Section 74—Compulsory Scheme membership

Amendments 146 and 147 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Amendments 211 and 212 not moved.

Amendments 148 and 149 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 74, as amended, agreed to.

Section 75 agreed to.

Schedule 3—Schedule to be substituted for schedule 2 of the PVG Act

The Convener

The next group of amendments is on regulated roles with children or adults in relation to elected representatives and political activities. Amendment 222, in the name of Alex Cole-Hamilton, is grouped with amendments 223 to 231.

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

I am grateful for the opportunity to be here today to speak to amendments 222 to 231.

Before I start, I note that I am aware that discussions have been had about my motives for lodging the amendments. I assure the committee that it is not about showboating, virtue signalling or weaponising the process to embarrass political parties into voting one way or the other. It comes from a deeply held belief in child protection that comes after working in children’s services, children’s rights and child protection for 13 years before my election to the Scottish Parliament.

I was heavily involved in the consideration of the original Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007. I was recruited to the Government’s voluntary sector issues unit, which met over the course of eight months to ascertain the practicalities of the implementation of the new scheme as it was rolled out. That politicians have an exemption was a loophole that I identified and raised at the time, but we were unable to close the political gap and change it. Now we have an opportunity to right that wrong.

I open my remarks on the amendments with specific reference to the policy memorandum, which states:

“The Scottish Ministers consider that roles for which PVG membership is a mandatory requirement should have at their core the capacity or opportunity to exert significant power or influence over a child or protected adult.”

I agree, which is why, when the bill was first introduced to Parliament in June 2019, I asked whether the Government would extend the provisions to include elected representatives. The minister will remember that she answered my question with positivity and suggested that she would be happy to assess whether parliamentarians fell into that category. My task today is to persuade the committee that they do.

Whether politicians are elected or in senior party positions, they have the capacity to change lives. They can offer help and solve sometimes intimate problems through their casework. They dispense patronage through employment and mentorship, and can offer schoolchildren work placements that are unlike any other.

In today’s personality-driven culture, politicians can sometimes seem like celebrities. There is no question but that they have power and influence. The recognition of that power and influence is almost universal outside this Parliament, so it is unsurprising that, with that recognition, comes a basic assumption that the PVG scheme already applies to politicians. That assumption turns to astonishment when people learn that politicians are exempted. One Edinburgh teacher recently said:

“The fact you have received several thousand votes isn’t any sort of guarantee of somebody’s suitability to be alone with or in the presence of vulnerable people”.

Given the protections that are rightly in place for teachers and others, the fact that nothing should apply to powerful people who encounter the same young people is a double standard and has the potential for serious abuse.

I know that many elected members take steps to ensure that they are never alone with a vulnerable constituent or a child, which is to be commended. However, there is no requirement for members to take such steps. It is conceivable that an MSP might be alone with a protected adult. For example, that might happen if that adult specifically asks for a private meeting or if a staff member is suddenly unable to attend a home meeting—life gets in the way. An MSP could find themselves alone with a young person who is on work experience, driving them around the constituency. That might not be considered good practice and it would certainly expose the elected member to risk, but they are in no way prohibited from doing it.

My central point is that, because politicians have influence and access, should they wish to have it, they are at liberty to have that access unencumbered by safeguarding of any kind. Put simply, we are trusting that, because an individual has persuaded a body of people to elect them to office, their intentions and conduct will be assured. I am sorry, but I cannot accept that that is sufficient. As we know and as the committee has heard throughout stage 1 of the bill, PVG checks are not a magic bullet and do not flag everyone who needs to be flagged. The checks offer only one layer of safeguarding, but it is an important one.

The first draft of my amendment sought simply to remove the exemption for elected representatives, and the Government rightly pointed out the grave constitutional implications of making the entirety of an elected position a regulated role. It would have meant that, should a sitting MSP, for example, fail a PVG check, a minister could theoretically unseat that MSP.

10:30  

My amendment 224 therefore seeks to regulate one aspect of the work of elected representatives—and one alone—which is the occasions when they might have cause to be alone and unsupervised with children or vulnerable adults. There is widespread precedent for elected representatives being put through PVG checks in recognition of certain aspects of their role. Local authorities currently require a PVG check for councillors who sit on children and families committees, because of the likelihood that they might inspect children’s homes and have other unsupervised contact in that regard. Amendment 224 applies to that small but conceivable function of the role of an elected member, and it explicitly states that it is limited to such engagement.

To deal with the situation in which a sitting elected representative fails a PVG check and is found to have been barred from working with children or vulnerable adults, proposed paragraphs 32A and 32B, which would be inserted by amendment 226, would give ministers the power to work with elected institutions to build procedures so that such an elected representative could not undertake that specific kind of regulated work on an unsupervised basis. The person would continue to be an MSP and could continue to meet all the people that they would have done without a PVG check, but safeguards and protections that do not exist at present would be in place.

Jamie Greene

Will the member take an intervention?

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Yes.

The Convener

I am sorry. I will let Jamie Greene come in later, but we do not have interventions in this part of the debate.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Okay. I am happy to come back to Jamie Greene later.

I cannot understand why we would not want to have that level of reassurance. PVG checks set a standard and, if people do not meet that standard, provision needs to be made to protect those who need to be safeguarded.

As with any other area of work, the knowledge that background checks reveal would be wholly restricted. The PVG scheme is rooted in privacy. The electorate or media would not know, and would not have the right to know, any details. Under data protection law, only the managing organisation is entitled to such information. However, the electorate and the media would at least have the knowledge that someone who did not have a PVG check would not be allowed to be alone with children, and safeguarding provision would be put in place. People can have no such confidence or reassurance of that at the moment.

My amendments cover every level of elected office in Scotland. The Scottish Government contends that that rides up against the Scotland Act 1998 in so far as it places requirements on Scottish MPs. To address those concerns, I say that child protection is entirely devolved. If we do not feel that we can put the same safeguarding requirements on Scottish MPs, no other democratic institution is empowered to do it for us. MPs do not have diplomatic immunity in Scotland and, when operating in Scotland, they have to abide by every law that is passed by the Scottish Parliament.

Amendments 225 and 227 stretch the provisions to cover people who hold positions of responsibility in political parties. The amendments are self-contained and stand alone. Right now, it is an offence for a political party to ask for a PVG check for anyone who is not undertaking regulated work, as it is currently defined. However, we know how things can be. A target-seat candidate is at the centre of everyone’s attention for the seven or eight weeks of an election campaign. They might end up working long into the evening in campaign offices with a range of volunteers who might fall into either category. Influence in politics can be magnetic, and we need to recognise the combination of influence and access, wherever that might exist.

A PVG check is not a barrier or a bar to candidacy but, along with other safe recruitment practices, it would help political parties to make better-informed decisions about allowing candidacies to progress. My amendments have been drafted so that all the provisions stay within devolved competence in relation to child protection and the protection of vulnerable adults. The amendments exist primarily to change the culture of expectation around the checks that people have to undertake in pursuit of a political career. Some people have said that that might present a barrier to those seeking election, and that a PVG check costs money, which is certainly true. I agree with the principle that there should be no financial impediment to standing for election, but that can be sorted through regulations. There is precedent for fees to be waived—for example, that happens with Volunteer Scotland disclosure services. We could define political activity as a public service, and there are straightforward ways in which that could be arranged.

We all need to learn the lessons of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse. There are painful lessons for every party—mine included—and a multitude of institutions. The IICSA warned about putting reputation above child protection and about what can happen when there is no robust safeguarding. Indeed, if we are to take anything at all from the inquiry, it should be a recognition of the aura that politicians can carry, the deference to them that can occur, the assumptions that people make about their probity and the idea that they will self-police. To assume that election to office is the only element of safeguarding that we need is an attitude that will unquestionably put our children in danger, and it is an attitude that history has shown us opens the door to people who are determined to abuse others. It is time to shut that door.

In recent years, we have made huge progress towards creating a safeguarding culture in every other workplace and sector. Many are significantly better than they once were. Why, therefore, are elected politicians exempt from that process of improvement, when history and inquiries show that they should not be?

Voting against the proposal would send an awful message to every profession and sector in which people are working diligently and putting safeguarding at the centre of everything that they do. If members have concerns about the structure of the amendments, I am happy to work with the committee to tighten them up so that we can offer reassurance on how the proposal will work.

However, it has been more than a decade since we last updated disclosure law and there is a risk that, if we put nothing in the bill in that regard at stage 2, the window for getting something appropriate into the bill at stage 3 reduces massively. It might be another decade before we look at the issue again and to miss this opportunity to amend the bill would be to extend the exemptions that politicians currently enjoy, unencumbered by safeguarding. We are talking about a simple check that already applies to more than 1 million people in Scotland and which would trigger straightforward safeguards if necessary.

There is a gaping loophole, and we must close it.

I move amendment 222.

Gail Ross (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)

I thank Alex Cole-Hamilton for bringing this extremely important topic to the committee. The fact that he spent so much time talking about the amendments tells us something about the gravity of the situation. I think that this is far too big an issue for our committee to deal with at this point. We have taken no evidence on it. If we were going to address the matter, we would have to spend a lot more time on it. It is an issue for the whole Parliament to discuss.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Will the member take an intervention?

The Convener

We are not going to have interventions, Mr Cole-Hamilton. You will have an opportunity to sum up at the end of the debate.

Gail Ross

I agree that it is anomalous that people in positions such as ours, with the powers and responsibilities that we have, are not subject to PVG checks or something similar. However, having listened to what Mr Cole-Hamilton had to say, I am not any clearer about how the proposal would work in practice. He noted that, in councils, the test pertains to people who sit on committees that might deal with vulnerable groups. However, I do not agree that that relates to MSPs. Certainly, I would never put myself in a position in which I was alone with a child or vulnerable person in that way; I would always make sure that someone else was there. Life might get in the way, as Mr Cole-Hamilton said, but some adjustments have to be made to ensure that that never happens.

I sympathise with the intention behind the proposal, but the fact is that we need to go into the issues in a lot more depth. It is an issue of parliamentary standards and should therefore be discussed by the whole Parliament rather than dealt with by us in half an hour.

The Convener

Mr Greene, do you want to contribute?

Jamie Greene

Yes, and I apologise for any confusion about procedure.

I have a few questions for Mr Cole-Hamilton, which he can respond to in summing up. Would the proposed test take place before, during or after election periods? What would happen in the case of any snap elections such as the ones that we have had over the past few years? Would the test apply only to candidates who are standing in Scottish seats, even if they are members of other institutions?

Would the provisions apply to MPs who were elected in England and who were working in Scotland temporarily or otherwise? If a member of any elected body refused a PVG check at any point, would they be committing an offence? If they failed a PVG check, how would that affect their ability to carry on with their duties? Alex Cole-Hamilton said that they could not be unseated but would be restricted to undertaking certain types of role unless adjustments were made or they were supervised. I see gaping holes in that analysis.

I ask those questions in a positive spirit because, like Gail Ross, I think that there is a lot to be said for the member’s approach, and his long-standing interest in the subject is obvious. We share the member’s concerns, but the issue seems a much bigger one that will have ramifications outside this room and, indeed, the Parliament. To do the proposal full justice, therefore, it should go through a due process of scrutiny. We simply do not have time to do that in the short time that we have for scrutiny in stage 2 proceedings.

The Convener

A number of members want to speak. Mr Johnson is next.

Daniel Johnson

Mr Cole-Hamilton began by raising the question of his motives. I do not question those for a moment. Mr Cole-Hamilton’s commitment to child protection and children’s issues is beyond question. He should not be questioned or criticised for his attempt to shift the boundaries of what we attempt to do with the bill and generally with the legislative process. He is right that we must ensure that we have the highest levels of scrutiny and protection with regard to roles in which people have the opportunity to exert control over and influence children and young people.

However, he said a number of things about the nature of our role that I would question and, indeed, think are questionable and dangerous to state. He stated that, by virtue of our roles as MSPs, we can gain unsupervised access to children should we wish to have it—I think that that was how he put it. I categorically state that that is incorrect. Anyone who thinks that, by virtue of being an MSP, they have a right to have unsupervised access to children or an expectation of it is categorically wrong, and it is a dangerous assertion to make. We should be looking at what is an appropriate way for us to undertake our business. I do not think that we should conduct our business in a way that requires unsupervised access.

As I said in talking about Mr Greene’s amendments, we need to look at why and when people are required to have a PVG check under the bill. The bill seeks to rationalise that around roles, which is correct. We do not want to have a situation whereby PVG checks are required whenever someone might happen to have fleeting contact with children. The bill seeks to structure its requirements around situations in which someone has necessary and unavoidable unsupervised contact with children or has the ability to manage and administer the systems in which such contact takes place.

I do not believe that that situation pertains to MSPs. What is more, I do not think that it is advisable for it to do so, and I would challenge a comment that Mr Cole-Hamilton and other members made in that regard. Whether we are talking about a child or a vulnerable adult, it is not sufficient simply to have a staff member present. For practical and communication purposes, we need someone present who is responsible and has caring duties for that individual. If we have a surgery meeting with a child or vulnerable adult, it is important that a responsible carer is present so that we can confirm that our understanding of the case is what was intended to be communicated. However, that is not always straightforward. Therefore, before we even get to the question of whether it is appropriate to have unsupervised access, I do not think that that is a sensible or good way to get information or to communicate. However, I also consider that it is not sensible or appropriate for us to have such access.

10:45  

In that regard, our role is substantially different from the role of councillors. Councillors may require PVG checks not by virtue of their role as elected representatives or the fact that they may hold surgeries, such as we do, but because they are responsible for administering many of the social work and education institutions, organisations, systems and schemes that have direct responsibility for looking after, caring for and supervising children in local authority areas.

Ultimately, we need to consider what the PVG scheme is for. It is to inform employers and those organising the supervision of children. It is there not to be a system of vetoes or to debar people but to provide relevant information to those who administer the systems.

I cannot understand where the information on elected representatives would go in order to allow someone to make an informed choice. We are in an odd and unusual position, as we do not have a boss—we are not employed in that sense. We do not have an employer or manager who can use a PVG check to decide how to structure our role. A PVG check would therefore be used as a veto, in precisely the way that we do not want those checks to work.

It would be dangerous to use a PVG check as a passport that gives access to vulnerable people. Using it in those circumstances and in that way runs the risk of doing that. Furthermore, given that the scheme is administered formally by the Government, we would be placing ministers in an invidious position of presiding over and having access to information on fellow elected representatives that is provided in the PVG certificate as well as information that is not included in it. That has serious constitutional implications, which we should not take lightly.

I have spoken directly to a number of organisations that are interested in these matters and that have provided evidence to the committee on the bill. They agree with me that, although the motivations are worthy and understandable, the consequences and other considerations are serious, so they have significant concerns.

Moreover, it is not appropriate for us to expect to carry out unsupervised contact in that way, let alone to do so. The thought that somehow we expect that—if it exists—should be challenged. That is a matter for the Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee. I strongly suggest that, if there is any question of that being the case, a rule that we are not to have unsupervised contact with vulnerable people should be added to the code of conduct for MSPs.

Mr Cole-Hamilton talked about work experience. That is the one other situation in which such contact could conceivably happen. Unfortunately, work—whether paid or unpaid—is excluded from the bill’s provisions. There is a bigger question about whether work experience should be considered further. However, the consequences and the implications of requiring all those who are involved with people doing work experience in their businesses or organisations to have PVG checks would be far beyond the scope of what we have taken evidence on or considered.

For those reasons, with regret, I cannot support the amendments at this time.

Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)

My colleagues have covered much of what I was going to say. I support and agree with them. I have one question. Mr Cole-Hamilton said that he thought that not taking this action would be a lost opportunity for a decade. I do not believe that that would be the case. Will the minister, in summing up, confirm that that will not be the case?

Alex Neil

There is almost consensus among committee members. I, too, do not question Alex Cole-Hamilton’s sincerity or motivation. I know that he has a long background in this area of activity, and it is quite right for him to air his concerns.

I have several points to make. First, I think that the proposal is alien to the purpose of the bill. If there is a case for registering elected members, there is almost a case for having the whole population on the PVG register. That would totally dilute and divert resources away from the areas in which we need to focus resources. It is contrary to the main purpose of the bill.

Secondly, if we include the provision in primary legislation, there is a real danger that it will become a political football for people to kick—not just against their political opponents, but perhaps even against people in their own party. That would do no service to children or other vulnerable people.

Thirdly, to pick up on Daniel Johnson’s point, it is fair for us to ask the Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee to review the code of conduct for MSPs and to establish whether there is any need to amend or add to it. The code of conduct is legally enforceable and we are all subject to the law; at the end of the day, if we do anything untoward or even if we are suspected of doing anything untoward in relation to children or other vulnerable people, the law can take care of that and I am absolutely sure that it would.

I totally respect Alex Cole-Hamilton’s motivation and sincerity, but I think that this is the wrong way to tackle what might become an isolated incident. To the best of my knowledge, in 21 years in this place, no issue of this nature has arisen. That is not to say that it could not arise in the future, but that is a matter for the SPPA Committee to look at by reviewing the code of conduct and making sure that any loopholes are addressed. That would be a proportionate way of dealing with the issue rather than including the proposal in the bill.

Ross Greer

Like colleagues, I respect the work that Mr Cole-Hamilton has put into this. I am a PVG scheme member and, like Mr Cole-Hamilton, I have undergone safeguarding training for the purposes of youth work. I therefore appreciate what he is trying to achieve. I do not want to repeat points that colleagues have made, because I think that there is an area of consensus on the committee.

There are a couple of additional issues that are worth raising. The very short debate that has been had on the issue so far has essentially conflated the role of all elected representatives. However, these are all distinctly separate roles; the issue of MSPs’ competence to legislate on the matter has already been touched on. I would like to distinguish between the role of an MSP and that of a councillor. The Parliament does not run schools; we do not run care homes; and we are not responsible for the inspection of such facilities. That is not to say that, for that reason alone, MSPs should not be required to undergo something similar to a PVG check. However, it comes back to the core point that a number of members have made. This is an incredibly complicated debate with significant repercussions and we have simply not had the opportunity to explore all the issues sufficiently.

I appreciate what Mr Cole-Hamilton is trying to do. Staff have raised concerns with me about what the implications might be for MSP staff. Again, such issues could be teased out and thrashed out. Those concerns included whether additional responsibility or expectation would be put on staff. Also, would additional resource be deployed if an MSP were to fail a PVG check? If additional resource had to be deployed, how could that possibly be kept confidential in the public environment that we work in? Those are all questions to which there might be entirely satisfactory answers, but this is not a setting in which we can satisfactorily thrash all that out.

If Mr Cole-Hamilton wants to pursue the proposal, I urge him not to press it now but to work on it with others. I would be particularly interested in hearing the position of the Children and Young People’s Commissioner Scotland, the Law Society of Scotland and Clan Childlaw, but there also needs to be a much wider debate for Parliament and for our public institutions as a whole. Despite what I have said about a commitment to thorough safeguarding procedures, we should always be instinctively sceptical of anything that would create a barrier to elected office, even if it was a cultural barrier that came about as an unintended consequence of a valiant effort such as this.

As I said, I urge Mr Cole-Hamilton not to press his amendments today.

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

I agree with the comments that colleagues have made about application of the PVG scheme to elected members. I will not exercise those arguments again, but I want to focus for a moment on the amendments that would extend the requirement to cover political activities. In the first contribution to the debate on the group of amendments, Gail Ross made the point that, although the principle seems straightforward and worthy, the more we examine the amendments, the greater the consequences that flow from them appear to be. For that reason, they need careful consideration, which we will not be able to provide properly at this stage.

I have three questions for Mr Cole-Hamilton about the development of the amendments. First, what consultation has he undertaken with councillors, the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities, MPs, MSPs, the Electoral Commission and other bodies that will have an interest in a requirement being placed on candidates? Secondly, how would his proposed system operate for those who stand for election as independents and not as members of political parties? That is relatively unusual in parliamentary terms, but there are local authorities where almost all the contests are between independents.

My third question is on competence. I appreciate that Mr Cole-Hamilton has said that, in his view, this is an issue of child protection, which is devolved, but it seems to me that there is a strong counter-argument in that the amendments would place a requirement on candidates in UK elections, over which we do not have competence. What independent legal advice does Mr Cole-Hamilton have to support the position that he has put to us?

Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)

I record my thanks to Alex Cole-Hamilton, who is, I believe, pursuing his proposal with the best intentions. I sat on the committee at the time—in 2008 or 2009—when he provided us with information on the subject as a witness, and I understand where he is coming from.

My concerns relate to where the responsibility and, by definition, the accountability of the Parliament and the political parties would stand. In that regard, I will cite my role: I have been in the job of chief whip for only three weeks, but I can see a lot of contradictions and concerns—and perhaps a conflict of interest—between the role that the Parliament would have and the role that political parties would have with respect to who was responsible for making decisions about PVG checks and how that information would be passed from one to the other. I foresee a lot of difficulties with that.

I agree with Iain Gray that it is incumbent on us all to ensure that there is legal advice. I am not sure whether Mr Cole-Hamilton has taken specific legal advice, as opposed to advice from the children’s commissioner, on how his proposals would work. However, I am not convinced that they are workable. The issue for me is about the responsibility that people would have to take with regard to PVG checks and any information that was forthcoming from them, especially should someone not live up to the standard and fail the test. Would that come down to the political parties? In most cases, they are responsible for deciding whether people are fit to stand for office. Alternatively, would it be a decision for the Parliament, which would then report to the political party? I think that there are a lot of complex tensions there.

I agree with the points that have been made about the implications of the amendments for MPs and other jurisdictions. I am not in a position to vote on the amendments, but I have grave reservations about their workability. There are serious concerns that they could make this Parliament’s workings more complex than they need to be, and they raise a lot of issues to do with how the proposal relates to political parties. That is my big concern.

The Convener

Before I bring in the minister, I will make a comment. Mr Cole-Hamilton gave the specific example of an elected representative travelling with someone who was on work experience. My local authority’s guidelines make that impossible, because we are specifically instructed not to be alone with a young person who is on work experience. I highlight that to illustrate again that there is a lot of work to be done on the matter. We need to work with COSLA and other organisations to get it absolutely right. However, I thank Mr Cole-Hamilton for bringing the issue to the committee.

I invite the minister to comment.

11:00  

Maree Todd

The amendments are well intentioned in their aim, and I thank Alex Cole-Hamilton for raising an important issue. I have listened very carefully to the debate and am grateful for the opportunity to explain the Scottish Government’s position.

The amendments present a number of challenges that have very significant constitutional implications. They have not been subject to consultation with the public or with the Parliament, and I firmly believe that it would be better if Alex Cole-Hamilton raised the matter with the Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee, or even with the Presiding Officer, so that that committee or the Presiding Officer could look at it on behalf of the Parliament. I am absolutely prepared to work with the Parliament to find a solution, but I do not think that the provisions of the bill are the appropriate place to do that.

Criminal record checks are a vital tool to support and inform recruitment. For that reason, I am sympathetic to the rationale behind calls for including elected representatives in the PVG scheme. It is important to remember that the scheme is specifically for people who work with vulnerable groups and that there is no pass or fail to disclosure. The presence of disclosure information does not automatically mean that somebody is unsuitable to work with children and protected adults.

Committee members will be aware that there are non-PVG level 2 disclosures as well. In broad terms, the other forms of level 2 disclosure offer the same disclosure information that the PVG equivalent does. However, they do not bring people into the scheme, which requires ministers to bar an unsuitable person from regulatory roles. Non-PVG level 2 disclosures are used for judicial appointments, for instance.

If there is a desire in the Parliament to allow an identified body to have access to non-PVG level 2 disclosures for elected representatives, I am open to discussing how that can be implemented. To achieve that, we would in all likelihood change the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 (Exclusions and Exceptions) (Scotland) Order 2013 to cover elected representatives. That could be done through secondary legislation instead of the bill, but it would require very careful consideration of who would be appropriate to receive a disclosure and make decisions about the suitability of elected representatives to hold office.

As I have previously said, criminal record checks can be only one aspect of safeguarding, and no organisation should ever be solely reliant on them in protecting vulnerable people. I agree with Mr Cole-Hamilton that there are very painful lessons to be learned from the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse.

It is worth while for us to take a moment to reflect on the lessons that we have learned from the case of Cyril Smith MP. That case clearly illustrates an inadequate institutional response to allegations of child abuse. As such, it shows us precisely the kind of problem that Alex Cole-Hamilton is trying to solve.

Cyril Smith was never convicted in his lifetime, but allegations of child abuse, including reports to the police, were made against him over four decades. It is possible that a criminal record check would have contained other relevant information relating to that, but it is also possible that it would not. When we reflect on his case, it is very clear that safeguarding children is about much more than a criminal record check. It is everyone’s responsibility to protect children, and a key part of safeguarding is recognising and responding to allegations of abuse.

What are the responsibilities of all of us when allegations are made? In Cyril Smith’s case, it is clear that people around him did not feel that it was their responsibility to respond to allegations. It is not at all clear that a criminal record check would have protected children in that case. A different response from those to whom allegations were made would have protected children.

That is why I would advocate a more holistic response to the problem than just a criminal record check. I agree with the members who have said that in most situations it is best practice to have at least two adults present when they are working with children and young people. I question whether there is ever any need for children to be unsupervised while with an elected representative and I advocate that we should work together as a Parliament to ensure that safer working practices are in place to avoid that.

I turn to Mr Cole-Hamilton’s amendments. He said that he wants all elected representatives in Scotland to be subject to a PVG check and membership. The amendments also seek to bring into the PVG scheme people who hold positions of responsibility in political parties. However, the amendments will not achieve their aim for elected representatives, because they will not bring all elected representatives into the PVG scheme in relation to both the children’s and adults’ workforces.

In relation to children, some elected representatives may never carry out the activities that are described in proposed new paragraph 30A. They could organise their constituency and other business so as not to have unsupervised contact with children. Many of us have stated that that is what we currently do. Even if an elected member has contact with children, they must take steps to ensure that the session or event always takes place in the presence of a responsible person, meaning that the child would not be unsupervised. If contact with the child is not unsupervised, amendment 222 means that the activity is not within the scope of the PVG scheme.

Similarly, the amendments will not have the effect of bringing all elected representatives into the PVG scheme in relation to carrying out regulated roles with adults. Again, it is entirely possible that the elected representative will never engage in the activity described because they may choose not to run sessions or events involving protected adults. There is the completely unacceptable risk that protected adults would have fewer opportunities to engage with their elected representatives—for instance, by being excluded from events run by elected representatives who were not scheme members and were concerned about the implications of inviting them. There is also the question of how the elected representative would know whether any given session or event included a protected adult, since the definition relies primarily on private and intangible characteristics.

With amendments 226 and 229, Alex Cole-Hamilton appears to recognise that there are constitutional problems with his proposals. The amendments propose that ministers should make regulations to disapply the offence provisions with regard to elected representatives so that the amendments could apply effectively to elected representatives. However, I have noted that those amendments do not extend to political activities, meaning that, for example, a decision by Scottish ministers exercising their barring functions under the PVG act could in effect prevent a barred individual from standing as a candidate for election in the first place.

The committee should note that the existing powers in the PVG act to disapply the offence provisions for particular types of regulated work have been used only once before. There are regulations that disapply the offence provisions in the context of permanence orders, so that an administrative decision by Disclosure Scotland’s protection unit on behalf of Scottish ministers cannot override a court decision made in the best interests of a particular child by listing an individual who happens to be a foster carer of a child on a permanence order. That is to prevent the individual and the council from committing a serious offence by following the order of the court and allowing the child to remain with the individual beyond the date of the listing decision

That exception clearly applied to a particular situation that was entirely different from the proposed approach for elected officials. The amendment neither delivers PVG membership for all elected members as a certainty, nor necessarily covers the activities that a member might undertake with children as it is simply dependent on whether the children are unsupervised during those activities, making it ambiguous to an elected representative whether they were required to join the PVG scheme and, if so, in relation to which workforce.

Disapplying the offence provisions would remove the benefits of the barring arrangements under the PVG scheme. On that basis, there is no justification for requiring elected representatives to participate in the PVG scheme, because all we would be left with is the state issuing disclosure records. As I have said, if there is a desire in the Parliament for non-PVG level 2 disclosures to include representatives, I am open to discussing how that can happen.

Like other members, I am unclear to whom a disclosure should be made. The amendments make no comment on who would be an appropriate person to assess the suitability of MSPs for a regulated role. There are also difficulties with regard to the public’s understandable expectation of transparency with respect to their elected representatives. The body that would receive the information would not be able to share the disclosure information, including information about listed status more widely.

I invite Mr Cole-Hamilton not to press his amendments but to take up the matter with the Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee. I urge committee members to reject the amendments if they are pressed to a vote.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I have been asked a lot of questions, and I have a lot to unpack, so forgive me if I take a bit of time.

At the start of my remarks, I referred to my time on the voluntary sector issues unit of the Government implementation group for the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007. We met weekly for eight months to iron out the kinks of the roll-out of what was a considerable bureaucratic exercise of retrospective checking.

A very charismatic chief executive of a voluntary sector organisation who was an expert in child protection was on that group. Half way through that process, he was convicted of being part of one of the most egregious paedophile rings in Scotland’s history. The man would not have been flagged by the PVG scheme. I mention the case because it shows that with status comes an assumption of probity. He could have gone on to have a political career. Although the PVG scheme might not have caught him in that circumstance, it provides a level of assurance and safeguarding that we currently do not have for any elected member.

Most members have asked about self-policing and said that they would never put themselves in such a situation. I understand and respect that; I also applaud them for it, as it shows that they have safeguarding at the forefront of their minds. However, as politicians, we need to legislate for people as we may occasionally find them, not as we would wish them to be. As such, we have to accept that there are politicians who will not have that probity and that desire for safeguarding, because they might have nefarious intent—and we have heard examples of politicians who have been found wanting in that regard.

Jamie Greene asked several questions, including one about snap elections. My proposals—we have discussed the work around this—are that the checks would form part of the regular vetting process that parties employ in the selection of candidates. I would hope that parties already vet candidates. Under my proposals, someone who is to become a target-seat candidate—or any candidate—in an election, would go through a vetting process. It would be much the same as when someone joins a Scout group or works in a Sunday school, in as much as a PVG check would form part of the usual recruitment and selection process.

On the roll-out of my proposals, that is all open for discussion, and a lot of that could be swept up in that time.

Jamie Greene asked whether the requirement would apply only to Scottish seats. Yes, it would; we have the power to legislate only within Scotland. It would not apply to visiting members of Parliament from other jurisdictions. Why? Because it is not reasonable to expect that they would have cause, during a visit, to have unsupervised contact with either children or protected adults.

What would happen if somebody refused to undergo a PVG check? That is certainly possible; people might take umbrage at being subjected to that manner of check. I would hope that the culture would change such that they are seen as just being part of political life. However, if someone refused a check and went on to undertake regulated work—as we would define it through my amendments—they would be committing an offence and would be subject to the full force of the law.

If someone fails a PVG check, my amendments would allow ministers to make arrangements with the democratic institutions concerned. That is an important point, and several members have asked about it. We are not reinventing the wheel here. There are clear rules of engagement and strata in existing voluntary organisations, including large organisations, as to who receives the information about disclosures or barring certificates. In the Parliament, it would not be the Presiding Officer, because the Presiding Officer is a member of the Scottish Parliament and therefore one of our peers. The chief executive, who is the organ of the Scottish Parliament, would work with the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body, and possibly with the Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee, to make provisions to cover the unlikely event that an MSP fails a check.

11:15  

On Dan Johnson’s remarks about protected adults, it is important that we are careful on that aspect, because the definition of a protected adult is a lot broader than one might think. Someone who is a protected adult does not automatically have a communication support need and they do not necessarily even have a carer. Somebody who is of advanced years and who has comorbidities or a range of conditions would be considered to be a vulnerable adult, but there might be no one else in their life, so it might not be appropriate to suggest that they should be supported by a carer or representative to help with their communications.

When we are elected, we are given no guidance on the rules of engagement that we should employ in the normal course of our work. For example, there is nothing to say that we should not be alone with people, whether we should have the door open or closed and who should sit by the door. No such information is given to MSPs—or, if it is, I have probably not seen it. We should have that information. However, even if there was guidance, there would be no prohibition on the access that we can enjoy. We all have power in our offices. We can all say, “This is going to be a sensitive meeting, so I should take this one alone,” and our staff will not demur. We know the culture in which we find ourselves.

Alex Neil said that my amendments are

“alien to the purpose of the bill”

and would, in a sense, dilute it. He asked why, if we extend the scheme to elected members, we should not then extend it to the whole population. In response, I simply say that the whole population does not have the power and influence that we have as elected members. That is important. People come to us to receive a service—they want us to help them and they need us. Sometimes, they are in abject desperation. Other members of the public never have that leverage over vulnerable individuals, so I reject that argument.

Alex Neil and Dan Johnson suggested that the issue could be swept up by the Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee or through the code of conduct. The code of conduct really only matters after the fact; it kicks in only if we breach it. Therefore, if a member is alone with somebody or has unscrupulous contact with a person, that will be dealt with through the code of conduct only if the code is breached. Using the protecting vulnerable groups scheme would give people confidence that those who serve them as their elected members had been through the check and that there was a level of safeguarding. It would not be foolproof, but it would be there, and it would be more than we currently have.

Ross Greer said that the difference between councillors and members is that we do not run schools or children’s services. That is entirely accurate. However, we visit schools regularly, and we do so with a bit of pageantry. There is quite a lot of excitement and we are made to feel the centre of attention. We have an influence in the rooms that we visit.

Ross Greer and other members said that the proposal is too big for the bill and that we have not consulted on it. It is not big. It would close a small loophole in the original act—the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007—that made an exemption for politicians and elected members. If the committee wants to take additional evidence on the issue, please do so. If the committee rejects my amendments, please open up evidence again between stages 2 and 3. If my amendments are not agreed to, as I rather suspect will happen, I will write formally to the committee to request that.

The committee still has the time and the necessary parliamentary levers to take the evidence that it needs to in order to test the proposal to get it right. We need to get this right. I get the point that we do not want to put up barriers to people being elected, but people already believe that this barrier exists and are really surprised and shocked to learn that it does not. People understandably assume that, because sports coaches and Sunday school teachers have to get a PVG check, the process already applies to MSPs.

Iain Gray asked me very specific questions. I have carried out a range of consultation activities in my party and I have spoken to council leaders, councillors, members and office bearers in the strata. I have not taken legal advice other than the discussions that I have had with Parliament clerks. Amendment 222 comes from a good place—from my experience, as someone who has done work in the field for a good number of years.

On the question about independent candidates, I understand that there are loopholes and problems, but if we define regulated work as having specific criteria—as I do in my amendments—independent candidates who did not have a PVG certificate and undertook such work would also be committing an offence and so would be subject to the full force of the law. I am certain that there would very quickly be an expectation that such candidates would have a PVG check—if everyone else has gone through a PVG check it would become the norm. Even someone who was running as an independent candidate could expect to undertake that, too—perhaps with guidance from the returning officer. However, I accept that there is a question mark over that one.

Several people have asked about competence. I say it again: Scottish MPs operating in Scotland do not have diplomatic immunity. If, as a Parliament, we say that we cannot impose a requirement on Scottish MPs to have PVG checks, they shall forever have no PVG checks, because no one else is empowered to insist it of them. The House of Commons cannot insist on child protection measures for their MPs that are different from the ones that we have in Scotland. That would be an offence right now because we have not defined their activities as regulated work in a Scottish context. As I say, we are not reinventing the wheel—it is not as complex as some people suggest.

Finally, the minister suggested that my proposal comes out of the blue and that there had been no consultation. However, I raised the issue in Parliament in June 2019, and I raised it subsequently, at the turn of the year, as we started consideration of the drafting of amendments to the bill. The minister brought up Cyril Smith and I understand why she did. As I said at the top of my remarks, this issue affects every party—and, on the basis of that case, my party more than most. Cyril Smith would not have been caught by the PVG scheme, but a PVG check would be one more layer than we have right now. Other relevant information might have tipped off the authorities in his political party that he was an unfit person to field as a candidate.

The minister also asked what would happen if a member had accidental unsupervised contact—if they did not have a reason to believe that there was a protected adult or child and suddenly found themselves in what we have defined as regulated work. The bill already covers that. Section 74 introduces the new section 45C, which provides a defence for when someone did not have a reason to believe that they would be in the proximity of children or a protected adult.

If, in a few years, something happens in a car park at a constituency surgery or behind closed doors in a council office and there was prior evidence that the elected representative concerned posed a threat to vulnerable adults, it would be utterly indefensible for the Parliament to have said, “We don’t need to do that check”—a check that would have raised a red flag to say that that person should not be alone with children or protected adults; it is hard to imagine the fury that would rain down on this place in such circumstances.

We are talking about a simple check that, as I have said previously, is applied to millions of our fellow countrymen and women. It should apply to elected members. I press amendment 222.

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 222 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Wishart, Beatrice (Shetland Islands) (LD)

Against

Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Allan, Dr Alasdair (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Greer, Ross (West Scotland) (Green)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Ross, Gail (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 1, Against 10, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 222 disagreed to.

Amendment 223 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 223 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Wishart, Beatrice (Shetland Islands) (LD)

Against

Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Allan, Dr Alasdair (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Greer, Ross (West Scotland) (Green)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Ross, Gail (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 1, Against 10, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 223 disagreed to.

11:25 Meeting suspended.  

11:31 On resuming—  

The Convener

The next group of amendments is on miscellaneous provisions in relation to regulated roles with children or adults. Amendment 150, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 151 to 162, 213, 163, 214, 164 to 176, 215, 216, 177 to 179, 217, 180 and 218 to 220.

If amendment 213 is agreed to, amendment 163 is pre-empted, and if amendment 217 is agreed to, amendment 180 is pre-empted.

Maree Todd

One of the key reforms that the bill makes to the PVG scheme is to replace the concept of “regulated work” as the eligibility criterion for scheme membership with “regulated roles” as a trigger for mandatory membership of the PVG scheme. The shift to “regulated roles” addresses the complexity within the current system and offers certainty about who needs to be in the scheme. It also contributes to the aim of refocusing the scheme on roles that give the postholder an opportunity to exert power or influence over children or protected adults. These amendments have been lodged to ensure that schedules 3 and 4 of the bill are appropriately scoped and that they draw people into the PVG scheme when it is necessary and appropriate. In the main, the same amendments have been lodged for both schedules. To avoid repetition, I will discuss the amendments that occur first in the group, which are mostly in relation to schedule 3 for children; I will highlight the corresponding amendments that relate to schedule 4 for adults.

Amendments 150 to 154 narrow the scope of the exceptions to regulated roles with children

“in the course of a personal relationship”.

In the bill as it was introduced, there is an exclusion for activities that are

“carried out in the course of a family or personal relationship.”

That would mean that a friend who provides paid adult personal care services to another friend would not have to be in the scheme. That is wider than the existing exclusions in the PVG act, which require that, for the family or personal relationship exclusion to apply, there should be no “commercial benefit”. The amendments ensure that the provisions are consistent with the existing exceptions in the PVG act and prevent a potential gap that could be exploited to circumvent the mandatory PVG scheme.

Amendments 164 to 170 make the same adjustments to the exceptions for regulated roles with adults. As I mentioned at the outset, a key driver of the shift from “regulated work” to “regulated roles” is to draw into the PVG scheme those roles where power or influence is exercised over vulnerable groups. Amendments 155 to 157 and 171 to 173 insert into the bill a definition of “exercising power or influence over” children or protected adults. That definition is inserted into the meaning of “contact”, in place of existing references to making decisions that affect children; in conjunction with the activities in schedules 3 and 4 of the bill, it will make it easier to identify whether a role is within the scope of the scheme.

Amendment 158 removes the word “employability” and references to “health or wellbeing” from paragraph 11 of schedule 3 and inserts the word “education”. That refocuses the activities in paragraph 11 to those that are more relevant to services for children. That will ensure that we do not inadvertently bring jobcentre staff into the PVG scheme.

Amendment 174 amends schedule 4 in a similar fashion in relation to protected adults.

Amendment 159 removes “exclusively” from paragraph 20 of schedule 3. The purpose of that is to ensure that, where the premises listed are used by vulnerable groups and non-vulnerable groups, individuals carrying out domestic services in them would still need to join the scheme. Under the bill as introduced, it is only where the premises in paragraph 20 are used exclusively by children that an individual would be required to join the scheme. Where they are used by adults as well as children, an individual would not be required to participate in the scheme. Amendments 159 and 175 address that anomaly.

Amendments 160 and 161 modify paragraph 24 of schedule 3, removing “support services” and replacing those words with a reference to

“advice or guidance in relation to health or wellbeing”

to prevent a wide interpretation of paragraph 24 drawing administrative or backroom staff into the mandatory scheme. Amendments 177 and 178 make the same adjustment in schedule 4.

To address a similar concern around administrative staff, amendments 162 and 163 amend schedule 3, and amendments 179 and 180 amend schedule 4. Those amendments bring in more direct language around providing the various types of activities and services described. That will ensure that the regulated roles are those that are directly involved with children and protected adults rather than those that are involved in making payment arrangements to allow those activities to take place. At present, it could be argued that “contact” includes written communication, if people in such administrative roles sent letters to children or protected adults. Those amendments will avoid drawing such roles into the scheme where that is not necessary or appropriate.

I thank Dr Allan for lodging amendments 213, 214, 217 and 218, as they point to an important observation with regard to schedules 3 and 4. I agree that the insertion of a separate heading for religious activities is helpful. I also note that Dr Allan’s amendments 214 and 218 will, apart from the insertion of the new heading, have the same effect as amendments 163 and 180 in my name. I am not opposed in principle to Dr Allan’s amendments. My officials brought the matter to my attention after Dr Allan raised it with them at the evidence session prior to the stage 2 proceedings, and it was our intention to ask the parliamentary clerks to arrange for headings and italics to be inserted into the schedules administratively, as printing changes to the bill. That would have allowed us to insert a heading and italics above paragraph 27 of schedule 3 and paragraph 19 of schedule 4, creating a separate category of religious activities as distinct from leisure activities. However, Dr Allan’s amendments pre-empt and are consistent with our plans. For further clarity, we can request a new italic heading before paragraph 28 of schedule 3 and paragraph 20 of schedule 4 to denote that they concern sports activities.

I thank Iain Gray for amendments 215, 216, 219 and 220. Amendment 215 will make it explicit in the bill that individuals providing support to a protected adult under a shared lives scheme are carrying out a regulated role. Amendment 220 provides definitions of “shared lives agreement”, “shared lives carer” and “shared lives scheme” for the purpose of amendment 215. In his evidence before the committee, Ben Hall from Shared Lives Plus drew parallels between shared lives carers and foster carers. Mr Hall acknowledged that shared lives carers will be brought into the mandatory PVG scheme by some of the other activities in schedule 4. I agree with that position, but I recognise that Iain Gray’s amendments offer a helpful addition that captures the uniqueness of the shared lives model of care. Accordingly, I have no objections to amendments 215 and 220.

Amendments 216 and 219 will bring other individuals aged 18 or over into the mandatory PVG scheme by dint of who they live with. Under the current legislation, an enhanced disclosure with suitability checks—that is, a check of the barred list—can be required for an individual over the age of 16 who resides in the same household as an individual who is being assessed as to their suitability to be a foster carer within the meaning of section 96 of the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007. Amendments 216 and 219 go much further than that. They would have the effect of bringing individuals aged 18 or over into the PVG scheme due to who they live with rather than as a result of the role that they actively carry out. Therefore, I do not consider amendment 216 to be appropriate.

I agree that there should be parity between individuals who reside in the same household as a foster carer or a shared lives carer, and that the latter should be eligible to receive a level 2 disclosure. Eligibility for level 2 disclosures without PVG membership is not set out in the bill; instead, it will be a matter for secondary legislation and will be achieved through an amendment to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 (Exclusions and Exceptions) (Scotland) Order 2013 as part of the implementation process for the bill. I would be happy to speak further to Iain Gray if he would like to discuss how that work might be progressed.

If Dr Allan moves his amendments 213, 214, 217 and 218, I ask committee members to support them.

If Iain Gray moves his amendments 215 and 220, I ask committee members to support them.

I urge Iain Gray not to move his amendments 216 and 219. However, if those are pressed to a vote, I ask committee members to reject them.

I move amendment 150.

Dr Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)

Amendments 213, 214, 217 and 218 in my name deal with two relatively minor but nevertheless important issues. As the minister said, the amendments are to schedules 3 and 4 to the bill, where, at present, religion is classed under leisure activities. I am attempting through my amendments to address, first, an equalities issue, in that members of faith groups are unlikely to think of their activities as being in the same bracket as, say, a golf club, so the term “leisure activities” is probably unhelpful. Secondly, and more practically, a number of faith communities have contacted me to say that that classification risks causing confusion when people engage with the legislation in future and that it would be easier to correct the categorisation of religious activities.

With that in mind, my amendment 213 would strike the religious activities paragraph under the leisure activities section of schedule 3, which is at line 21 on page 82 of the bill. Amendment 214 would add a new religious activities section at the end of schedule 3, at line 22 on page 82. Amendment 217 would strike the religious activities paragraph under the leisure activities section of schedule 4, at line 22 on page 87. Amendment 218 would add a new religious activities section at the end of schedule 4, at line 24 on page 87.

By adopting my amendments, I hope that we can simplify and make more efficient the process of disclosure within our faith communities. As I said, those are small points, but I hope that my amendments will be helpful. If nothing else, minister, I think that we have learned about the importance of italics in legislation and will watch out for them in future.

Iain Gray

The minister has largely already covered the purpose of amendments 215 and 220, which, as she indicated, arose from evidence given by Ben Hall of Shared Lives Plus in the course of the stage 1 scrutiny of the bill. Shared Lives Plus’s concern was that the care model that it pursued should be properly caught by the legislation. It saw that as largely paralleling the arrangements for foster families, with the difference being that, in its model, on which 15 schemes now operate in Scotland—the number grows each year—those who live with families are not children but are often adults with learning disabilities or, increasingly, adults who suffer from dementia in their later years.

I have listened carefully to the minister’s comments, on the basis of which I am prepared to not move amendments 216 and 219 when the time comes. I am also prepared to work with her and with Shared Lives Plus, prior to stage 3, to ensure that we achieve that objective. If the minister thinks that that could be done better through regulations, I am sure that the organisation would be prepared to discuss that.

The Convener

As it appears that no other member wishes to comment, I ask the minister whether she wishes to wind up.

Maree Todd

No, convener—other than to say that I would be very willing to work with Iain Gray, Shared Lives Plus and other stakeholders to ensure that we get those amendments right.

Amendment 150 agreed to.

Amendments 151 to 162 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

11:45  

The Convener

I remind members that if amendment 213, in the name of Dr Allan, is agreed to, amendment 163 is pre-empted.

Amendments 213 and 214 moved—[Dr Alasdair Allan]—and agreed to.

Amendment 224 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 224 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Wishart, Beatrice (Shetland Islands) (LD)

Against

Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Allan, Dr Alasdair (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Greer, Ross (West Scotland) (Green)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Ross, Gail (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 1, Against 10.

Amendment 224 disagreed to.

Amendment 225 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 225 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Wishart, Beatrice (Shetland Islands) (LD)

Against

Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Allan, Dr Alasdair (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Greer, Ross (West Scotland) (Green)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Ross, Gail (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 1, Against 10.

Amendment 225 disagreed to.

Amendment 226 not moved.

Schedule 3, as amended, agreed to.

Schedule 4—Schedule to be substituted for schedule 3 of the PVG Act

Amendments 164 to 176 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Amendment 215 moved—[Iain Gray]—and agreed to.

Amendment 216 not moved.

Amendments 177 to 179 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

The Convener

I remind members that if amendment 217 is agreed to, amendment 180 is pre-empted.

Amendments 217 and 218 moved—[Dr Alasdair Allan]—and agreed to.

Amendments 227, 228, and 219 not moved.

Amendment 220 moved—[Iain Gray]—and agreed to.

Amendment 229 not moved.

Schedule 4, as amended, agreed to.

Section 76—Meaning of “protected adult”

The Convener

Group 5 is on the meaning of “protected adult” in the PVG act. Amendment 181, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 182 to 185.

Maree Todd

The existing definition of “protected adult” in the PVG act relies on a person being in receipt of a particular type of service, which can be a health, social, community or welfare service. Experience of operating the PVG scheme has shown that that definition is challenging in practice. Accordingly, when the policy for the bill was being developed and consulted on, it was proposed to amend the definition of “protected adult” in section 94 of the PVG act and insert a new schedule 3 to the PVG act. That will allow the new definition of “protected adult” to tie in with the new concept of regulated roles, which will replace regulated work.

However, stakeholders’ responses to the bill have indicated that the move away from references to specific types of services and replacing those with references to the characteristics of the individual who is in receipt of them—illness, old age, physical or mental disability and a resulting impaired ability to protect oneself from harm, or a requirement for assistance with the activities of daily life—may lead to some people falling outside the definition in the amended section 94 who would have been caught by the current section 94.

Amendment 181 replaces the words “old age” with “infirmity or ageing” as a factor that, if it results in an individual having an impaired ability to protect themselves from physical or psychological harm, or in an individual requiring assistance with the activities of daily living, will mean that they meet the definition of “protected adult”. Stakeholders reported concerns about the adverse connotations of the term “old age”. The revised wording of “infirmity or ageing” clarifies who may be brought into the scope of being a protected adult.

Amendment 182 removes the word “significantly” from the test of whether the person’s ability to protect themselves from physical or psychological harm is impaired. Scottish Women’s Aid raised concerns that reference to a significant impairment would lead to vulnerable people being excluded from protection. Amendment 182 responds to that concern.

Similarly, amendment 183 responds to feedback that individuals who are homeless or affected by domestic abuse should be included in the definition of “protected adult”. Amendment 183 brings such individuals within the meaning of “protected adult”, but in relation only to a regulated role that involves the carrying out of the activities that are mentioned in paragraph 16 in schedule 4 to the bill, which include provision to protected adults of counselling, therapy and advice or guidance in relation to health or wellbeing. That restriction is necessary to ensure that we do not disproportionately draw people into the scheme.

As noted, the definition of “protected adult” is complicated and has been difficult for PVG users to navigate in practice. Amendment 184 affords ministers a degree of flexibility and future proofs the bill so that amendments can be made to the definition of “protected adult” to ensure that sufficient coverage is provided by the PVG scheme. The amendment lists the same types of services that are currently provided for under section 94 of the PVG act.

Amendment 185, which is technical, provides a meaning for “domestic abuse” and, as such, is consequential on amendment 183. It also contains consequential amendments to provisions in section 94 of the PVG act that define certain terms, to ensure that those definitions continue to work in the light of amendment 184. The definitions themselves would not be altered in any way. However, we have listened carefully to the views of stakeholders and I am aware that there are still some concerns about the amendment. I am interested in hearing members’ views and I am happy to work with members to find a solution before stage 3. I will not move amendment 185.

I move amendment 181.

Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD)

I note that the minister has said that she will not move amendment 185. I am a trustee of Shetland Women’s Aid, which comes under the umbrella of Scottish Women’s Aid. On amendment 185, there is still concern about the definition of domestic abuse, so I am encouraged by the minister’s comments that work will continue on that issue.

Jamie Greene

I echo Beatrice Wishart’s comments, and I thank Scottish Women’s Aid for its submission to members, which I found helpful. Originally, the Scottish Conservatives had planned to support amendment 185 if it was moved by the minister but, in light of the comments that have been made, it feels as though there is still some work to be done.

That raises a wider issue on the redefinition of vulnerable individuals. For example, after my initial glance at amendment 185, I had questions about proposed new section 94(2A)(a) in the PVG act, which refers to an individual who “has experienced” abuse. I was asked a question about a person who had, historically, unfortunately been the victim of abuse, as defined in the amendment, being caught under the current definition of a vulnerable person, even if the abuse took place many years or decades ago and the person wished to move on in life and not to be defined as a vulnerable person.

I wonder whether amendment 185 as drafted encompasses all scenarios, although I appreciate that it is difficult to encompass all individual circumstances in legislation. We all want to get this right, but we do not want to catch people under the definition in legislation of those who are vulnerable or need to be protected simply by default due to historical circumstances. I ask the minister to reflect on that.

The minister mentioned flexibility, specifically in relation to amendment 184. I appreciate that flexibility seems to be required, but what scrutiny will be afforded to the committee or the Parliament if ministers seek to use that flexibility to redefine any of the definitions that she detailed?

Maree Todd

Officials have discussed this group of amendments with Scottish Women’s Aid. I am aware of its comments, and I acknowledge its concerns that the drafting of amendment 185 could be unduly narrow compared with people’s common understanding of what might amount to domestic abuse. It is important for us to provide a definition in the bill because, without that, there would be uncertainty about who is covered by amendment 183.

On amendment 185, we sought to tap into definitions that are used in existing legislation to help to define the term, and such definitions are intended to be broad. In view of stakeholder feedback and today’s debate, I will not move amendment 185. I will instruct my officials to continue to engage with relevant stakeholders, including Scottish Women’s Aid, ahead of stage 3 to see whether we can lodge a revised amendment. As ever, I am more than happy to work with any committee member who wishes to be involved in finding an appropriate solution that addresses the concerns that stakeholders have raised.

Amendment 181 agreed to.

Amendments 182 to 184 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Amendment 185 not moved.

Section 76, as amended, agreed to.

Section 77—Conditions imposed on scheme members under consideration for listing

The Convener

The next group is on consideration for listing. Amendment 186, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 187 to 195.

12:00  

Maree Todd

Section 30 of the PVG act provides that ministers must inform certain persons of a decision to consider someone for listing, to list someone or, as the case may be, not to list someone. Those persons are the individual concerned, organisations for which the individual undertakes regulated roles and relevant regulatory bodies.

As it stands, the bill will allow ministers to notify an individual who employs others but not in the course of business that a scheme member is being considered for listing and has standard conditions imposed. Those personal employers, as they are known, are typically individuals who, for example, pay for their child’s music tutor or employ a carer in the context of self-directed support. However, the bill and the PVG act, as they stand, do not provide for ministers to notify those same personal employers of the final outcome of the consideration process; that is, whether someone carrying out a regulated role for them has been listed.

The amendments address what I consider to be a potential safeguarding loophole and improve the protections for private individuals who employ PVG scheme members. On a related issue, the amendments make it clear that personnel suppliers are covered by the section 30 notification provisions in the PVG act.

There are technical amendments in the group to ensure that personal employers are not criminalised under the bill in relation to a failure to ensure that a scheme member complies with the conditions that are imposed on them. The amendments make it clear that personal employers are not covered by those offences, which is consistent with the other offence provisions for employers under the PVG act that apply only to organisational employers and personnel suppliers.

I move amendment 186.

Amendment 186 agreed to.

Amendments 187 to 190 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 77, as amended, agreed to.

Section 78—Notice of consideration for listing

Amendments 191 to 193 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 78, as amended, agreed to.

Section 79—Withdrawal from Scheme when under consideration for listing

Amendments 194 and 195 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 79, as amended, agreed to.

Sections 80 to 83 agreed to.

After section 83

The Convener

The next group is on the PVG act and removal from the lists. Amendment 196, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 197 and 198.

Maree Todd

The amendments concern elements of the PVG act barring service and how they can be improved. The amendments are principally concerned with ensuring that the right people remain on or are removed from the barred lists.

Amendment 196 changes the test in section 25 of the PVG act relating to applications for removal from the lists, so that it more explicitly reflects the filtering nature of the provision. Disclosure Scotland’s experience of applying the competence test under section 25(3)(b) of the PVG act is that the threshold for when ministers should consider the application is insufficiently clear. That is because there can be changes in circumstance that would not be relevant to a determination by ministers about whether the applicant was no longer unsuitable to carry out regulated roles with children or adults.

For instance, if an individual changes their career, that is a change of circumstances, but not one that is relevant to the decision that ministers must make under section 26 of the PVG act on whether the individual is no longer unsuitable to carry out a regulated role with children or adults. An application that includes details of such a change in circumstances would be incompetent, as it would not meet the threshold test under section 25(3)(b). On the other hand, where a change of circumstances is relevant to the test applicable under section 26, the threshold is cleared, and that application should be properly determined under section 26 on the merits of the specific change. Amendment 196 makes it clearer that a change in circumstances must be relevant to the determination that is to be made under section 26 of the PVG act.

Subsection (4) of the new section introduced by amendment 196 repeals sections 25(5) and 25(6) of the PVG act. Disclosure Scotland’s experience is that sections 25(5) and 25(6) might serve to confuse applicants and that they create a false impression that a conviction being quashed will automatically lead to a person’s removal from the list. That is not the case, since there are different standards of proof for a criminal finding of guilt beyond reasonable doubt and the civil standard for listing decisions, which is the balance of probabilities. Therefore, although a conviction being quashed might be a relevant change in circumstances that would lead to a competent application for determination under section 26 of the PVG act, it would not always be relevant. The revised explanatory notes will make that clear.

Amendment 197 expands the possibility of late representations or additional information being used after a listing decision is made, so that ministers will have the option to remove that person from the list if they are satisfied that they are not unsuitable to carry out regulated roles of the type that they were listed for. That addresses our concern that some people fall into the gap in the removal provisions in the PVG act and that there is no way for them to be removed from the list, even if Disclosure Scotland thinks that they should be.

For instance, an individual who is invited to make representations, but who did not do so for whatever reason, has no basis for asking ministers to remove them unless they can establish a change in circumstances and make an application for removal under section 25. That is because the test under section 29(1)(b) of the PVG act is that ministers must be

“satisfied that the individual should not have been listed.”

The test of whether someone “should” not have been listed is not necessarily the same as a test of whether they “would” not have been listed if the information had been available at the time of the original decision. As it stands, the only remedy for someone in such a situation would be to appeal against listing, under section 21 or section 22 of the PVG act. We are seeking to eliminate that step so that, should late representations or additional information become available subsequently, ministers have the discretion to remove that person from the list if they are satisfied that they are no longer unsuitable to carry out regulated roles of the type that they were listed for.

Amendment 198 relates to the information-gathering powers that are available to ministers under sections 18, 19 and 20 of the PVG act. The power to obtain information ends when the initial listing decision has been taken, except where there is a formal application for removal from the list under sections 25 and 26 of the PVG act. In other circumstances where there is any future consideration by ministers regarding whether an individual ought to be removed from the list, including under new powers that are provided for in amendment 197, ministers have no power to obtain information from the police or any other bodies.

The new provision broadens the powers to obtain information to apply in relation to all decisions that are to be made by ministers, including decisions about whether someone should stay on the list at a later date. It is appropriate for ministers to have information-gathering powers when they are making a decision at a later date—when considering, for instance, an appeal against listing, an application for removal from one of the lists or whether to remove an individual from one of the lists. Ministers’ role at those subsequent stages of decision making is the same in substance as it is when the original decision to list an individual is made. The information-gathering powers are necessary and appropriate in the context of ministers’ statutory functions to operate the PVG scheme and barring service.

Amendments 196 to 198 should therefore be seen as a package of changes that ensure that the right people remain on the barred lists and the right people are removed from those lists.

I move amendment 196.

The Convener

Jamie Greene has a question.

Jamie Greene

Thank you for affording me some time to briefly ask the minister a question. There was quite a lot to take in. Members would probably benefit from reading the minister’s comments, rather than listening to them, because they were so technically intense. However, any time I spot the words “ministers’ powers” in legislation, they jump out at me. Are the powers to remove people from the lists ones that the minister can exercise already under the existing legislation, or are they additional ministerial powers?

Using phrases like “where ministers consider it appropriate” or “at ministers’ discretion” injects an element of subjectivity into the process by default. I would have assumed that Disclosure Scotland is fairly watertight. What are the additional powers and why do you need them?

Maree Todd

They are additional powers that align with the powers available to ministers to gather information at the time when the original barring decision is made. We think that it is appropriate for ministers to also be able to gather information when decisions are made whether to remove someone from the list.

I think that that answers your question, but if you have a concern, I am more than happy to consider that between now and stage 3. The powers are simply those required to operate the system as we hope that it should operate.

Amendment 196 agreed to.

Amendments 197 and 198 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Sections 84 and 85 agreed to.

After section 85

The Convener

Group 8 is on offences outside Scotland. Amendment 199, in the name of the minister, is the only amendment in the group.

Maree Todd

Amendment 199 is a technical amendment to ensure that jurisdiction for the new extraterritorial offences in the bill is conferred on the sheriff courts. The policy intent of the provisions in the bill is to bring overseas work that would have been a regulated role if done in Scotland into the PVG scheme where there is a relevant connection to Scotland—for instance, if the employing organisation sending the individual overseas is based in Scotland. It is intended to address situations in which, for instance, a Scottish charity sends aid workers to another country to do what would be considered a regulated role here. The Scottish Government’s intention is that those people should have to be scheme members.

The current drafting is such that the general rules on scheme membership, including the offence provisions, should automatically apply to such overseas roles. They would also apply when an organisation based outside Scotland sends someone to do a regulated role in Scotland. It is necessary to ensure that offences committed outside Scotland can be prosecuted here, to give full force to the new provisions. The amendment ensures that Scottish courts have clear jurisdiction over offences under the PVG act whether the behaviour giving rise to the offence takes place in Scotland or elsewhere.

I move amendment 199.

Amendment 199 agreed to.

Amendment 200 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 86 agreed to.

Section 87—Regulations

Amendment 221 not moved.

Sections 87 to 89 agreed to.

Schedule 5—Consequential and minor modifications

Amendments 201 to 203 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

The Convener

Group 9 is on consequential amendments to the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. Amendment 204, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendment 207.

Maree Todd

Amendments 204 and 207 make amendments to the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 that are consequential to parts 1 and 2 of the bill respectively. The Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 makes reference to the Police Act 1997 and the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007 and disclosures issued under those acts, mainly enhanced disclosures and scheme record disclosures.

The bill repeals some sections of the PVG act and part 5 of the 1997 act in its entirety. Amendment 204 replaces those repealed and superseded references with references to the new form of level 2 disclosures that are to be issued under the bill. The amendment also ensures that there is symmetry between the content of a level 2 disclosure and a PVG scheme record. Finally, where relevant behaviour information was originally provided as vetting information by the chief constable, but the independent reviewer determined that it ought not be included in a level 2 disclosure, that no longer amounts to vetting information for the purposes of the PVG act such that it could trigger consideration of listing.

12:15  

Members will recall that amendments 112 and 202, which were in a previous grouping, introduced a codified set of principles to apply to decisions that are made in applying the two-part test of whether something is relevant and ought to be included in a disclosure certificate. Amendment 204 applies the same decision-making principles to decisions that are made under the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019.

Amendment 207 makes a consequential amendment to section 26 of the 2019 act, so that the definition of “regulated work” is substituted with a definition of “regulated role”, in the light of the new terminology in the bill.

I move amendment 204.

Amendment 204 agreed to.

Amendments 205 and 206 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Amendments 230 and 231 not moved.

Amendment 207 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Schedule 5, as amended, agreed to.

Sections 90 to 94 agreed to.

Long title agreed to.

The Convener

I thank the minister and her officials for attending, and I thank the committee and all members who took part in our scrutiny of the bill at stage 2.

Given a lot of the discussion of amendments that we have had during today’s proceedings, we will be sending a copy of the Official Report to the Standards, Procedures and Public Appointments Committee.

Meeting closed at 12:18.  

11 March 2020

Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee's Stage 2 report

Disclosure (Scotland) Bill as amended at Stage 2

Additional related information from the Scottish Government on the Bill

More information on the powers the Scottish Parliament is giving Scottish Ministers to make secondary legislation related to this Bill (Supplementary Delegated Powers Memorandum)

Stage 3 - Final amendments and vote

MSPs can propose further amendments to the Bill and then vote on each of these. Finally, they vote on whether the Bill should become law

Debate on the proposed amendments

MSPs get the chance to present their proposed amendments to the Chamber. They vote on whether each amendment should be added to the Bill.

Documents with the amendments that will be considered at the meeting that held on 10 June 2020:

Video Thumbnail Preview PNG

Debate on proposed amendments transcript

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)

The next item of business is stage 3 proceedings on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. In dealing with the amendments, members should have with them the bill as amended at stage 2, the marshalled list and the groupings of amendments. I remind members that, as usual, the division bell will sound and proceedings will be suspended for five minutes for the first division of the afternoon. The period of voting for that first division will be 30 seconds. Thereafter, there will be a voting period of one minute for the first division after a debate.

Section 29—Review of removable convictions by the independent reviewer

The Presiding Officer

The first group consists of minor and drafting amendments. Amendment 1, in the name of the Minister for Children and Young People, Maree Todd, is grouped with amendments 2, 3, 20, 21, 27, 28 and 30 to 34.

The Minister for Children and Young People (Maree Todd)

The amendments in this group are minor and drafting amendments, and they do not make any policy changes. They are required, as a consequence of amendments made at stage 2, to provide consistency in drafting between provisions.

Amendments 1 to 3 bring the drafting of sections 29(2), 29(3) and 31(5) into line with that of section 28(2), so that they refer to a review of “the inclusion of” the removable conviction, rather than to

“a review of the removable conviction”

itself or to

“a review ... of the details of a removable conviction”

Amendments 20 and 21 are minor consequential changes to section 73, adding a reference to a provision inserted at stage 2. They simply mean that the persons referred to in new section 45B(4) of the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007 are to be notified when ministers have decided to extend the scheme member’s participation in the scheme for the discretionary membership period.

Amendments 27 and 28 make technical adjustments to the wording of section 82, which gives effect to amendments to the PVG act to bring that section into line with the drafting approach of other provisions that amend that act.

Amendments 30 to 34 are minor adjustments to the list of offences in schedule 2. They are consequential on amendments made to the offence lists at stage 2. In particular, there is no longer a paragraph 1 in schedule 2, which is a consequence of amendments made at stage 2. References to that paragraph in paragraphs 111 to 115 in part 3 of schedule 2 are redundant and need to be fixed. Amendments 30 to 34 correct those now obsolete references to paragraph 1 with references to paragraph 2, which is now the first paragraph in the schedule.

I move amendment 1.

Jamie Greene (West Scotland) (Con)

I thank the minister for coming back to the chamber with those amendments, which reflect much of the conversation at stage 1, the committee’s stage 1 report and feedback from the stage 2 proceedings. As we go into the stage 3 debate, I will speak further on the wider bill but, at this point, members from these benches will not comment further on groups 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6. We will support all Government amendments that are placed before us at stage 3. However, subject to comments or speeches that are made throughout the debate, we might interject as appropriate, specifically around group 4. The Government can enjoy our support for all the amendments today.

Amendment 1 agreed to.

Amendment 2 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 31—Independent reviewer: information and representations

Amendment 3 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 34A—Disapplication of provisions of section 4 of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974

The Presiding Officer

Group 2 is on level 2 disclosures. Amendment 4, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 5 to 19.

Maree Todd

Section 34A was inserted into the bill by way of amendment at stage 2. It is modelled on section 8 of the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. Section 34A lifts the protections against the normal duty to self-disclose information about spent convictions that is afforded by section 4 of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974. That is so that someone who has applied for a review, under section 25, of the inclusion of

“a spent childhood conviction or children’s hearing outcome”

has to answer questions and provide honest and accurate information about that conviction or outcome for the purposes of the review. Our intention is to ensure that an individual who seeks review of the inclusion of a removable conviction, whether by Scottish ministers under section 28 or a review by the independent reviewer under section 29, is still required to answer honestly any questions that they are asked by ministers, the independent reviewer or a sheriff regarding the circumstances of their convictions, even after they are spent.

Amendments 4 to 19 cater for reviews of the inclusion of removable convictions in section 34A, bringing removable convictions into line with childhood convictions and children’s hearing outcomes in that section. Amendment 5 is the main amendment that achieves that. The other amendments in the group are technical, consequential amendments to the drafting and structure of section 34A, to reflect the reviews of the inclusion of removable convictions.

I move amendment 4.

Amendment 4 agreed to.

Amendments 5 to 19 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 73—Failure to apply for renewal of Scheme membership

Amendments 20 and 21 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 74—Compulsory Scheme membership

The Presiding Officer

Group 3 is entitled “PVG Act: power to require organisations to stop using individuals for regulated roles without scheme membership”. Amendment 22, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 23, 24 and 29.

Maree Todd

Amendments 22 to 24 are technical amendments to ensure that there is consistency of approach in relation to the parliamentary procedure to which regulation-making powers are subject.

At stage 2, section 74 of the bill was amended to insert a new section 45DA into the PVG act, creating a new power in connection with the mandatory scheme. Section 45DA(1) provides Scottish ministers with the power to make regulations to require organisations to stop using individuals for regulated roles without scheme membership. It is an offence under section 45DA(3) for an organisation to fail to comply with such regulations.

Section 45DA closely follows the approach in section 35(2) of the PVG act, which provides Scottish ministers with the power to make regulations in respect of stopping organisations from using barred individuals for regulated work. Although section 45DA is based on section 35(2), there is a mismatch in the parliamentary procedure to which those regulations are subject.

By virtue of section 100(3) of the PVG act, any regulations that are made under section 45DA(1) are subject to the negative procedure. However, when read with section 100(4), regulations made under section 35(2) of the PVG act are subject to the affirmative procedure. That issue was highlighted in the supplementary delegated powers memorandum that was for the attention of the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee. Accordingly, amendments 22 to 24 have been lodged to resolve that inconsistency by making regulations that are made under new section 45DA(1) also subject to the affirmative procedure. I believe that that is the appropriate level of scrutiny, given that regulations that are made under that section relate to offence provisions.

Amendment 29 also relates to new section 45DA. Proposed new section 47G of the PVG act, which is to be inserted by section 85A(3) of the bill, ensures that Scottish courts have clear jurisdiction over the new offences that are inserted by the bill into the PVG act. That applies in circumstances in which work is done outside Scotland that would be a regulated role if it were carried out in Scotland, or in which an organisation that is based outside Scotland sends someone to do a regulated role in Scotland.

Amendment 29 adds section 45DA into new section 47G to ensure that the offence of an organisation failing to comply with regulations that are made under section 45DA can be prosecuted in Scotland. The amendment ensures that there is consistency between all the new offences that are inserted into the PVG act by the bill.

I move amendment 22.

Amendment 22 agreed to.

Amendments 23 and 24 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

After section 75

The Presiding Officer

We turn to group 4, although I foresee a problem. Group 4 is on the PVG act: review and report on application of scheme to elected representatives and political activity. Amendment 39, in the name of Alex Cole-Hamilton, is the only amendment in the group. Alex Cole-Hamilton is not here, and no other member wishes to move the amendment on his behalf. [Interruption.] Mr Cole-Hamilton has arrived just in time.

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

It gives me great pleasure to apologise to the chamber for a second time today. I had no idea that we would rampage through the earlier groups so quickly. I had to return an important telephone call, but I give my sincere apologies. [Interruption.]

The Presiding Officer

Let us hear Mr Cole-Hamilton.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Members of the Education and Skills Committee will be familiar with the policy intention behind my amendment 39. Nobody else is allowed to be alone with children or vulnerable adults without a basic check being done first, but there is nothing legally to prevent MSPs from doing that. In fact, they and other powerful figures in politics are explicitly excluded from the provisions. That is wrong. There cannot be one rule for politicians and another for everybody else.

At stage 2, I was disappointed that the amendments that I lodged to change the position were not agreed to. I understand colleagues’ objections, but I hope that, in amendment 39, I have found a way through that might generate more support. Despite the way that the votes ultimately fell at stage 2, I was encouraged by committee members’ comments. There was overall agreement that the matter should be looked into.

Gail Ross agreed that

“it is anomalous that people in positions such as ours, with the powers and responsibilities that we have, are not subject to PVG checks or something similar.”—[Official Report, Education and Skills Committee, 11 March 2020; c 15.]

Iain Gray said that the principle seemed “worthy”. Ross Greer said that he appreciated what I was “trying to achieve” and asked for a “wider debate” to ensure that sensible questions can be given “satisfactory answers”. Jamie Greene told me that he shared my concerns and said that, to

“do the proposal full justice”,

we needed

“a due process of scrutiny.”—[Official Report, Education and Skills Committee, 11 March 2020; c 16.]

I hope that they and other members can see what I am seeking to do with amendment 39. In the current context, the approach in amendment 39 is the least burdensome that I can think of and achieves the objective of a proper discussion.

17:30  

Ministers would have until the end of June 2021 to establish an expert working group, which could involve doing as little as deciding on its chairperson. Amendment 39 would not place any deadline on when the working group would report. Once it reported, ministers would have a year to reflect on that and report back to the Parliament, thereby giving enough time for further evidence to be taken or for consultations to be done, if that was deemed necessary.

I apologise again for my tardiness.

I move amendment 39.

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

I begin by offering some personal advice: if someone is moving an amendment, it sometimes helps for them to sit through all the stage 3 proceedings. However, I will move on.

I had a number of concerns about and criticisms of the amendments that Alex Cole-Hamilton lodged at stage 2. My concerns were principally because the bill aims to simplify the system of PVG checks and prevent there being a simple, transferable passport that enables individuals to have unsupervised access to children. The focus on protected roles rather than protected work is very clear and useful, and his suggestions clouded the issues.

Furthermore, it is problematic to assume that someone has unsupervised access to children by dint of being an elected politician; that is a very dangerous proposition. However, I recognise that the position and office that we hold might lead others to assume that we might be allowed such access, which might lead unscrupulous individuals to infer that we do. Consideration is required, and therefore Alex Cole-Hamilton’s proposals at stage 3 are reasonable.

Whether MSPs should be subject to record checks is an appropriate suggestion, as is looking at whether proposals could be brought forward—

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I heard what Daniel Johnson said about it being very unlikely that members would have unsupervised contact with children. I also heard sedentary mutterings from members around the chamber that they never have unsupervised contact with children or vulnerable adults. However, that is the moral test that members set themselves and the moral threshold that they decide is appropriate.

I am not suggesting that anybody in the chamber would take such a risk. However, the provisions in my amendment are not about upstanding, law-abiding members of the public. We have to recognise that there are bad apples in politics—as there are in every walk of life—who might use their position of power to gain access to children or vulnerable adults. There is no legal, constitutional or procedural impediment in the Parliament to prevent us from having unsupervised contact with children or vulnerable adults, and I believe that the only safeguard that we can put in place is to have the same checking and disclosure system that we use for all other positions of authority.

Daniel Johnson

I thank Alex Cole-Hamilton for that intervention. However, I think that he somewhat repeated his initial proposition, which I find deeply problematic. It is not that there is no impediment; we simply should not have unsupervised access to vulnerable adults or children by dint of our being MSPs. That is quite simple and straightforward, and for him to repeat his point is somewhat dangerous.

Nonetheless, Alex Cole-Hamilton’s point about bad apples was well made. Our position is such that people could infer that we have such a right and, in that narrow regard, I think that his proposal for a working group to be created, a report compiled and propositions looked at is appropriate.

I am happy to support amendment 39.

Jamie Greene

I do not want to dwell on the arguments that we had at stage 2. Amendment 39 is different, and I give credit to Alex Cole-Hamilton for that. I also give him credit for bringing the issue back at stage 3 for the benefit of those who did not sit through the debate at stage 2.

I was a new member of the Education and Skills Committee during stage 2. Indeed, the bill was the first piece of legislation that I considered as a member of the committee. We had a very comprehensive debate on the issue, which we looked into in great detail. Across the committee, there was sympathy with the rationale behind what Alex Cole-Hamilton was trying to achieve—he picked up on that in his comments. There are circumstances where the proposed measures might have a beneficial outcome, but there was consensus that the bill is not the right mechanism to deliver the outcome that he seeks.

Amendment 39 is a substantial amendment, so it deserves our scrutiny in the chamber today. It asks ministers to set up a working group that will report back to ministers, after which ministers will report back to Parliament on their plans. I do not distrust ministers, but my problem with that approach is that it puts into the hands of politicians—indeed, into the hands of the politicians in whichever political party is in government—the power to recommend an alteration to the franchise in relation to who can be a member of this Parliament. Fundamentally, that puts the power into the hands of the wrong people.

I do not think that the amendment will have the outcome—it is a valid one—of dealing with the issue that Alex Cole-Hamilton is trying to address. Politicians are put in all sorts of circumstances in our constituency offices and in the course of our business—Daniel Johnson spoke at length about that and made some important observations in committee. I do not see how the amendment will deliver what Alex Cole-Hamilton is trying to achieve, but I am happy to give way to him if he wants to clarify that.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I appreciate Jamie Greene’s kind words about what is my second attempt with these provisions. My issue with his remarks is that he suggests that the findings of a working group would somehow alter, as he describes it, the franchise relating to the people from whom we elect our parliamentarians or other elected members. That is certainly not the intention of the amendment; in fact, I do not think that it would be lawful to do that.

My amendments at stage 2 were about ascertaining whether a prospective candidate or a sitting parliamentarian was on the list of people who are barred from working with children or vulnerable adults. The working group might recommend that the Parliament has a duty to ensure that such people never have unsupervised contact—not that they should be barred from standing for elected office. That is an important distinction, which Jamie Greene has not recognised in his remarks thus far.

Jamie Greene

What is the point of such disclosure if it is not to prohibit any individual from standing as a candidate or becoming an elected member?

The second part of the amendment defines the legislation that Mr Cole-Hamilton would want ministers to introduce; it refers to

“a Bill for an Act of the Scottish Parliament”.

It also defines an “elected representative” as

“a member of the House of Commons, a member of the Scottish Parliament,”

or

“a councillor of a council.”

If we agreed to amendment 39, we would be encroaching on other pieces of legislation and, indeed, legislatures over which we have no control, so for that reason we will not support the amendment at the late stage at which it was introduced.

However, we commend Alex Cole-Hamilton for valiantly trying to bring the issue back to our attention. I am sure that the Government will reflect on it. I hope that we will hear more today about how the Government will approach the issue; if we do, the Government will have the support of all parties.

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

Mr Greene was right that, at stage 2, there was a pretty comprehensive examination of the ideas that are encompassed in the amendment that Alex Cole-Hamilton has brought forward today.

Committee members identified a number of significant problems. One was the problem that Daniel Johnson referred to regarding the questionable or debatable idea of the appropriateness of the ways in which parliamentarians should go about their work. There were other problems, such as questions about the procedures that would have to be put in place for what would happen if something was disclosed in a PVG submission. There is a real danger that the position of ministers might be compromised by their having privileged access to information on MSPs in their own party or other parties. To be fair, the minister made it very clear that that was not a position in which ministers wanted to be placed.

Mr Greene also touched on one of the other problems with Alex Cole-Hamilton’s proposals: their breadth. They were not just proposals about MSPs, because they also encompassed councillors, many of whom, although not all, are members of the PVG scheme—for example, if they are on a council’s education committee. The proposals had not been discussed with councillors, who had not been consulted about them.

The amendment also covers members of Parliament. There was some debate in the committee as to whether that would stray into an area beyond our constitutional powers. Mr Cole-Hamilton argued that it would not, but I did not find that convincing.

Perhaps most difficult of all, the proposals strayed into mentioning party officials—a term that was poorly defined—and then on to candidates. There were genuine questions about how the democratic right to stand for election might be compromised.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I am grateful to Mr Gray for giving way, and I will not take up much more of Parliament’s time.

My stage 2 amendments were clumsily drafted and Mr Gray has rightly questioned them. However, does he agree that the issue comes down to the potential for people in powerful positions—such as the chair of a selection committee, a local party chair or agent who has the power to make or break political careers—being able to use their power with nefarious intent? Does he recognise that that is, at present, a power that otherwise goes unchecked?

Iain Gray

I do not accept that Mr Cole-Hamilton’s amendment is the legal mechanism by which to deal with such a situation.

I have to accept the quotation ascribed to me by Mr Cole-Hamilton. I can see, with regard to MSPs—and only MSPs—that there may be a principle here: why should there be a requirement that we place on so many others but which is not placed on us? For that reason alone, we are prepared to support further examination of the proposals, although we do so in the full knowledge that those doing that examination may also struggle to reach an appropriate resolution to the problems that the committee identified.

Clare Adamson (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)

As convener of the Education and Skills Committee, I take this opportunity to thank my colleagues for their diligence throughout the stage 2 proceedings on the bill.

I agree with much of what has been said today. We all support the intent behind the amendment. Nobody in the chamber has a monopoly on giving our communities and the wider public confidence that they are protected in the best way possible by the disclosure system. However, to suggest that amendment 39 solves the problem that Mr Cole-Hamilton has raised would be misleading and could lead to confusion that there is some sort of protection that has not been provided.

I hope that there is another mechanism by which we can take the issue forward, but I do not think that that should happen through the bill.

Maree Todd

I recognise Alex Cole-Hamilton‘s strength of feeling on the matter and I commend his persistence on such an important issue. It is also clear that he has reflected on the debate at stage 2 and has sought a solution.

However, I still do not think that the bill is the appropriate mechanism for what needs to be achieved. As members will be aware, at stage 2, Mr Cole-Hamilton lodged related amendments, which were intended to bring MSPs within the scope of regulated roles and the mandatory PVG scheme and which the members of the Education and Skills Committee debated and overwhelmingly voted against. They noted that, although the amendments were well intentioned, the issue was one for the whole Parliament to reflect on so that it could reach a consensus on matters that extend beyond the remit of the bill. It was clear at stage 2 that the bill is not the vehicle to bring about the changes that Alex Cole-Hamilton seeks. That remains my view.

17:45  

The new proposals in amendment 39 would require the Scottish ministers to commission an expert working group to consider safeguarding in relation to elected representatives and political parties in the context of the disclosure system. Ministers would then be required to lead on deciding what legislation or other options could be brought forward in response to the expert group’s report.

Although I agree about the merits of creating a working group to look at the child protection issues around elected members, I do not think that it would be helpful to place the solution in the context of the bill and the disclosure regime. I agree with Jamie Greene that that would afford Parliament too little breadth of involvement, as the solution may lie in oversight of MSP conduct more generally and not simply in disclosure—I think that Labour Party members made the same point. Alex Cole-Hamilton made the point that the disclosure system is the only solution to the problem that he presents, but I profoundly disagree with that. The disclosure system is simply one part, albeit an important one, of the measures that exist to protect children and vulnerable adults from harm in Scotland.

Situating any review within the disclosure framework could limit the range of solutions that may flow from the working group’s recommendations. For instance, any legislative solution would simply take us back to the significant constitutional issues that I set out in response to Alex Cole-Hamilton’s stage 2 amendments on the issue. Alternatively, in an attempt to overcome the constitutional issues, the legislative response would in essence be toothless. Further, any legislative response in the context of disclosure would still have to overcome a number of practical issues, such as to whom a disclosure relating to an MSP would be made.

In respect of amendment 39, I would like to draw a few observations to members’ attention. If amendment 39 and the Government’s amendments 35 and 36, on the term “elected representative”, are accepted, that would result in two different definitions of the term in disclosure legislation.

Proposed new section 92A(10)(a), which amendment 39 would insert into the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007, provides that the meaning of “elected representative” includes

“a councillor of a council”,

but amendment 36, in my name, proposes the removal of that phrase from the bill. If my amendment was accepted, some councillors would continue to be within the scope of the scheme.

It is important to note that any proposal on elected representatives that was brought forward in response to the report of the working group to be set up under amendment 39 would likely encounter difficulties in finding a legislative solution, given that the definition of “elected representative” in proposed new section 92A(10)(a) would still include members of the House of Commons.

Alex Cole-Hamilton referred to a review one year on from royal assent being given to the bill, but I wonder whether he is aware that his amendment would amend the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007 and so would change measures that came in back in 2008. That muddle somewhat illustrates my point. Although the intention of the amendment is good, its execution is not.

As I said, amendment 39 is not the right solution to the undoubtedly important issue that it seeks to address. However, given the importance of the safeguarding issue, I want to offer an alternative solution that is wider in scope than the bill can provide for.

The Scottish Government proposes to commission and fund an independent review, to be chaired by ministerial appointment. The independent review, like the working group that Alex Cole-Hamilton proposes, would consider the issue of safeguarding in relation to elected representatives. The review could then make recommendations to the Parliament and the Government, as it sees fit. However, the remit of the review could be much wider than simply looking at the disclosure system, so any recommendations could be of further reach and could be more effective. A wider range of voices could contribute and solutions outside disclosure could be considered.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I am grateful to the minister for her remarks and I am encouraged by her offer. My original proposal suggested that a review would be instructed after a year. Obviously, the minister cannot bind the hands of a future minister or Government, so will she commit to Parliament that, if she is to commission such a review, it would be done before the Parliament rises for dissolution?

Maree Todd

I can certainly commit to working at pace on the issue. However, given that we are on an emergency footing and responding to the Covid pandemic, I cannot commit to doing what Mr Cole-Hamilton asks for. I am as keen to make progress as he is, and to do so at pace.

I thank Mr Cole-Hamilton for his role in progressing this important safeguarding matter, but I invite him to not press his amendment and instead to accept the offer of a Government-commissioned independent review. I urge members to reject the amendment if it is pressed to a vote.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I am grateful to all the members who have contributed to the debate and offered their considered reflections. The reality is that people are shocked that such basic safeguards in respect of MSPs do not exist already. A lot of the people whom I have spoken to, as well as people in the media, believe that those safeguards exist already, but they do not.

People have seen the inquiries that expose the danger of self-policing. They know that some people who work in politics use their status to manipulate, target and exploit vulnerable people—that goes for my political party as much as it does for any other. Other workplaces and sectors have made huge leaps forward in creating safeguarding cultures, and it is time for politics to start taking the issue as seriously as they do.

Parents should know that young people on work experience are with someone who can be trusted, no matter what. Carers should know that vulnerable adults who are attending a surgery are not going to be left with somebody who has not undergone any independent vetting whatsoever. [Interruption.] Again, I hear people from a sedentary position telling me that such things do not happen. They might not happen with them—they may not have nefarious intent—but they cannot speak to all the political classes and all their agendas.

I was disappointed with the reluctance that I encountered at stage 2, so I worked up amendment 39. I have taken heart from what the minister has said, although I am concerned that she is writing a cheque that will not be cashed in this parliamentary session. I very much hope—

Iain Gray

Does Alex Cole-Hamilton not agree that the minister’s offer is a good one? Even if his amendment is agreed to and becomes part of the bill, the truth is that, after the election, a future Government could decide to completely ignore any recommendations that the working group might make. It seems to me that the situation is not significantly changed by what the minister has said.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I was coming on to that point. I agree with Iain Gray, and as such I will not press my amendment. I am grateful for the movement that the Government has offered and I look forward to the establishment of the review.

Amendment 39, by agreement, withdrawn.

Section 76—Meaning of “protected adult”

The Presiding Officer

Group 5 is on the PVG act: meaning of “protected adult”, definition of “domestic abuse” and consequential amendments. Amendment 25, in the name of Maree Todd, is grouped with amendment 26.

Maree Todd

Amendments 25 and 26 relate to the meaning of “protected adult” for the purpose of the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007. At stage 2, amendments were made to the definition of “protected adult” to ensure that it is appropriately scoped and that sufficient coverage is provided by the PVG scheme. Included in the group was an amendment to make explicit in the bill that, in relation to a regulated role with adults that involves the carrying out of the activities that are mentioned in paragraph 16 of part 2 of schedule 3 to the 2007 act, an individual aged 18 or over who

“is homeless”,

or

“has experienced, is experiencing or is at risk of experiencing domestic abuse, is a protected adult.”

Although that amendment was moved and agreed to, I did not move the amendment that would provide a definition of “domestic abuse”. Prior to stage 2, Scottish Women’s Aid expressed concerns that the definition that was lodged could be unduly narrow compared to people’s common understanding of domestic abuse. Accordingly, I instructed my officials to further engage with Scottish Women’s Aid on the matter, with a view to bringing forward another amendment at stage 3. As a result of that engagement, amendment 25 offers a revised definition of “domestic abuse” for the purpose of the broader definition of “protected adult”. I take the opportunity to thank Scottish Women’s Aid for its feedback and support on the matter.

In amendment 25, proposed section 94(2A) of the PVG act provides that “domestic abuse” means

“behaviour (whether or not amounting to a criminal offence) that ... is perpetrated between partners or ex-partners, whether in the home or elsewhere or by means of electronic or other forms of communications, and ... involves any form of physical, verbal, sexual, psychological, emotional or financial abuse of one of the partners or ex-partners by the other.”

Proposed section 94(2B) of the PVG act makes clear that an individual is a person’s “partner” if they are

“married to each other, ... civil partners of each other, ... living with each other as if they were married to each other, or ... otherwise in an intimate relationship with each other”.

“Ex-partner” is to be construed accordingly. For consistency, subsection (2B) mirrors the definition of “partner” and “ex-partner” in section 11(2) of the Domestic Abuse (Scotland) Act 2018.

Including a definition of “domestic abuse” in the bill gives certainty to those who use the PVG scheme. That is of particular importance given the offences that are connected with the mandatory scheme that is introduced by the bill. Having a definition of “domestic abuse”, as with having a definition of “homelessness”, means that we will not inadvertently criminalise people who should not be included the scheme. It improves safeguarding by leaving no room for doubt about who should be a scheme member.

When read with the activities mentioned in paragraph 16 of part 2 of schedule 3 to the PVG act, the bill ensures that advocacy support services for those who report domestic abuse are covered by the PVG scheme.

Amendment 26 is technical in nature. It contains consequential amendments to provisions in section 94 of the PVG act that define certain terms for the purposes of the definition of “protected adult” to ensure that those definitions continue to work in the light of amendments that were made at stage 2 to the “protected adult” definition. The provisions in amendment 26 were part of the amendment that was lodged but not moved at stage 2.

I move amendment 25.

Iain Gray

I acknowledge the work that was done by the minister and her officials to engage with Scottish Women’s Aid to address this point. I know that Scottish Women’s Aid is content with amendment 25, which the minister has moved.

Scottish Women’s Aid has some continuing concerns, which it hopes will be addressed during the development of regulations and guidance. I would like the minister to commit that the engagement will continue in order to reach a resolution.

The Presiding Officer

Before I call the minister, I want to double-check that Mr FitzPatrick pressing his button was a mistake. [Laughter.] It is just a button. I call Maree Todd to wind up on the group.

Maree Todd

Mr Gray is correct. Scottish Women’s Aid has expressed on-going concern about the definitions in schedules 3 and 4, and we will take action to address that. Further engagement will be undertaken on a range of matters that require non-statutory solutions or might require secondary legislation. If necessary, further changes to the schedules can be made under secondary legislation using the existing powers in the PVG act.

Amendment 25 agreed to.

Amendment 26 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 82—Removal of references by court

Amendments 27 to 28 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Section 85A—Offences outside Scotland

Amendment 29 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Schedule 2—List B offences

Amendments 30 to 34 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Schedule 3—Schedule to be substituted for schedule 2 of the PVG Act

The Presiding Officer

Group 6 is on regulated roles—definition of “elected representative”. Amendment 35, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 36 to 38.

Maree Todd

As debated earlier in the proceedings, Alex Cole-Hamilton lodged an amendment at stage 2 on elected representatives, which specifically sought to bring MSPs and MPs into the scope of the PVG scheme. Mr Cole-Hamilton’s new amendment, which proposes the creation of an expert group to consider safeguarding in relation to elected representatives and political parties, was subject to debate in a separate grouping, and I will therefore limit my comments on it.

The amendments in group 6 relate to the definition of “elected representative” that was provided for in schedules 3 and 4 to the bill. Both schedules deal with the change from “regulated work” as defined in the PVG act to “regulated roles” with children and protected adults, respectively.

Within the schedules, reference is made to an “elected representative” in a number of the activities that give rise to regulated roles with children and adults. They relate to the ability to directly influence decisions about the safety and welfare of a child; the ability to directly influence the operational delivery of education, medical or care services for children; and the ability to directly influence the operational delivery of medical or care services for protected adults.

Where those activities are a necessary part of an individual’s role and there is the opportunity to have contact with the child or protected adult, those who undertake them must participate in the scheme, except where they are an elected representative—that is, a member of the House of Commons, a member of this Parliament, a member of the European Parliament who was elected in the United Kingdom or a councillor of a council.

As it is drafted, the bill therefore excludes from the PVG scheme members of councils who, as a necessary part of their role, have the ability to directly influence decisions or the operational delivery of education, accommodation, social services or healthcare services. That is an unintended departure from the current arrangements under the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007.

Under the 2007 act, councillors who are members of certain committees or joint committees that are concerned with the provision to children or protected adults of education, accommodation, social services or healthcare services are eligible to join the PVG scheme. Indeed, many councils across Scotland make use of those provisions. During stage 2, members of the Education and Skills Committee recognised the unique role that such councillors have in influencing such services and confirmed the appropriateness of some councillors being members of the PVG scheme.

In making the change from regulated work to regulated roles, we have inadvertently removed councillors on those committees from the scope of the PVG scheme. Amendments 36 and 38 have been lodged to preserve the status quo and ensure that councillors on the committees that I mentioned are required to be PVG scheme members.

I want to be clear that, with the amendments, PVG scheme membership is required only for members of committees who have the ability to directly influence decisions or the operational delivery of education, accommodation, social services or healthcare services to children and protected adults. Barred individuals will not otherwise be prevented from being elected as councillors or holding positions on committees that do not deal with the provision of services to children or protected adults. That is because of the narrow framing of the activities in paragraphs 7, 9 and 25 of schedule 3 and paragraph 17 of schedule 4, which make reference to the exclusion of elected representatives, meaning that only councillors with the ability to directly influence certain services for children and protected adults will be within the scope of the scheme.

I mentioned earlier the stage 2 debate and the constructive discussions on elected representatives. During that debate, it was recognised that, despite both being elected representatives, there is a clear difference between MSPs and councillors due to their roles and responsibilities. Daniel Johnson helpfully noted:

“Councillors may require PVG checks not by virtue of their role as elected representatives or the fact that they may hold surgeries, such as we do, but because they are responsible for administering many of the social work and education institutions, organisations, systems and schemes that have direct responsibility for looking after, caring for and supervising children in local authority areas.”—[Official Report, 11 March 2020; c 17-18.]

Amendments have been lodged to remove “councillor of a council” from the definition of “elected representative” in recognition of that difference and the importance of preserving the status quo under the existing legislation.

Amendments 35 and 37 remove references to members of the European Parliament who were elected in the UK from the definition of “elected representative”. Following the United Kingdom’s withdrawal from the European Union on 31 January this year, those references are obsolete, and accordingly they should be removed.

I move amendment 35.

Amendment 35 agreed to.

Amendment 36 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

Schedule 4—Schedule to be substituted for schedule 3 of the PVG Act

Amendments 37 and 38 moved—[Maree Todd]—and agreed to.

The Presiding Officer

That concludes consideration of amendments.

As members will be aware, at this point in the proceedings, I am required under standing orders to decide whether, in my view, any provision of the bill relates to a protected subject matter—that is, that it modifies the electoral system and franchise for Scottish parliamentary elections. In my view, the bill does no such thing, so it does not require a supermajority at stage 3.

I am conscious that some members have been here throughout the afternoon, so we will take a short break. I suspend the meeting for two minutes.

18:04 Meeting suspended.  

18:09 On resuming—  

10 June 2020

Final debate on the Bill

Once they've debated the amendments, the MSPs discuss the final version of the Bill.

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Final debate transcript

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Linda Fabiani)

The next item of business is the stage 3 debate on motion S5M-21976, in the name of Maree Todd, on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill.

We are already late in starting, so if members would like to finish, as discussed, for seven o’clock—or even earlier—it is entirely in their hands as to how they manage their contributions.

18:10  

The Minister for Children and Young People (Maree Todd)

I am pleased to open the stage 3 debate on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. First, I thank the members and clerks of the Education and Skills Committee for their sincere and constructive scrutiny of the Bill. I also thank stakeholders for their input throughout the process. I am particularly grateful to those who have been able to engage with us amid the uncertainty of the past three months. The bill is important and I am glad to be able to progress it at this time. That would not have been possible without their engagement before and throughout the parliamentary process.

Safeguarding the most vulnerable in society is at the heart of what Disclosure Scotland does, and that has been at the forefront of my mind in these challenging times. The system that we have today is in direct response to the tragic Soham murders of August 2002; we must never forget why the service is so important.

Part 2 of the bill delivers a range of reforms to the protecting vulnerable groups scheme. It strengthens that service to protect the public from those whose past conduct makes them unsuitable to carry out roles with children and protected adults. We will introduce a mandatory PVG scheme for people who carry out such regulated roles. There is overwhelming public support for such a measure, to close the current gaps in the scheme, and I am pleased to deliver the provision.

We will also provide stronger protections to those who engage the services of another in a personal capacity—for example, to those who arrange self-directed care—by ensuring that their employees are included in the PVG scheme. That complements the adjusted referral arrangements for Police Scotland, and new referral powers for local authorities, to support a safer Scotland.

This Government is committed to policies that balance public protection with the right to move on from past offences. As I have said before, those are not contradictory aims; both can be achieved. Last year, the Parliament passed the Age of Criminal Responsibility Act 2019 and the Management of Offenders Act 2019. Part 1 of the bill further delivers on those aims by making vital reforms to state disclosure. Together, all three pieces of legislation provide a transformed disclosure system that can better account for individual circumstances.

As a Government, we want to offer opportunities for everyone to flourish. That includes creating a strong, sustainable workforce, and making sure that no one faces unnecessary barriers to opportunity. Disclosure Scotland will continue to identify people who, given their past behaviours, are unsuitable for regulated roles, and will ensure that they are legally prevented from carrying one out. However, we must also allow people whose history is no longer relevant to move on.

We must give particular consideration to those who were involved in the justice system during childhood. That is especially true for care-experienced people, who are still disproportionately represented in the system. It is widely recognised that having a criminal record can significantly impact on future life chances and outcomes. Since becoming Minister for Children and Young People, I have heard powerful testimony from young people who have had to overcome significant trauma and who should not be haunted by mistakes that were made in their childhood. We have to do more—not only to prevent such experiences from happening in the first place, but to limit the damage that is done in the long term to individuals, families and communities. Those children must not be left behind.

Throughout the bill’s progress, we have heard evidence of care-experienced young people self-excluding from roles that ask for disclosure. Whether they exclude themselves due to childhood mistakes or uncertainty around how to navigate disclosure, the bill will transform their access and allow their voices to be heard.

Under the bill, there will be no disclosure period for the vast majority of childhood convictions as they will be immediately spent under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 in Scotland. Public protection will be served by provisions that draw a line around only the most serious criminal behaviour in childhood. That most serious behaviour will remain eligible for state disclosure and a duty will remain on the individual to self-disclose it, when asked by an employer, while it is unspent.

I am absolutely committed to ensuring that the reforms in the bill are clearly communicated to young people and those who support them. I recognise that, even with the reforms, the disclosure system can be intimidating and difficult to understand. I look forward to working with our stakeholders to ensure that everyone is able to access their rights.

The Education and Skills Committee recommended at stage 1 that the bill include guiding principles for decision making. Working together, we have ensured that those are included and apply to decisions under the bill, the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007 and the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019. That will provide helpful legal clarification on how decisions are made.

Once again, I am very proud to be moving the motion on the bill at stage 3. At the heart of every justice reform that the Government has introduced is our absolute belief that people are capable of change. Over the past three months, tens of thousands have volunteered to support their communities in these incredibly challenging times. Some of them may even have committed offences in the past, but today they are positively contributing to our national effort. The bill maintains and strengthens the safeguarding offered by state disclosure. However, it also recognises that people should be able to move on from their past. I move,

That the Parliament agrees that the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill be passed.

18:16  

Jamie Greene (West Scotland) (Con)

I thank members for their patience this evening. We have got to a stage at which the legislation has been appropriately amended and can be passed. I was new to the Education and Skills Committee during the bill’s passage, and I thank Liz Smith for dumping the bill on my desk on my first day of taking over the education brief.

It was clear during stage 1, and from the events leading up to the production of the committee’s stage 1 report, that the legislation was complex and that its effects and consequences required detailed analysis. That complexity is demonstrated by the large number of technical and tidying up amendments at stage 3, which show how difficult it was even for those drafting the bill to get it into a good place.

I will not comment much about our previous discussions on what the legislation will achieve. It is, however, important that we thank those who gave evidence to the committee and that we reflect on the importance of the bill. The whole point of the disclosure process since it was first established has been to protect children. The Parliament has made great strides in doing so through legislation in various guises. The bill will add to the collection of legislation on which I think that we will all have been proud to have worked during this parliamentary session. I also thank the minister for steering the bill through Parliament and for reflecting on some of the feedback that members gave.

The legislation is important because, as the minister said, we are on the cusp of a revolution in volunteering. As a result of the coronavirus, many people are helping out and getting involved in the third and voluntary sectors. It is important that we strike the balance between protecting children’s safety and welcoming people into the system.

I lodged an amendment at stage 2 about people under the age of 16 who are keen to engage in the voluntary sector. At issue was whether they would require vetting. We had a good debate about that. It is important that we invite and encourage everyone and anyone who wants to get involved to do so, but the process behind that needs to be robust, transparent and accessible.

At stage 1, the committee raised concerns about moving to a digital-only system and whether that would work for all groups and organisations. The Government has reflected on that. In the current situation, we want to encourage people into environments in which they will interact with children and vulnerable people. For example, there is talk about getting retired teachers into the education system quickly and efficiently. We also want to encourage people into social care—we know that that sector requires more people—the third sector, nurseries and other environments where disclosure checks are important. How do we that? How do we use the disclosure system to ensure that the large numbers of people who are coming forward are able to access services quickly?

The only other point that I want to pick up on in my brief comments is what has changed in the bill. During the stage 3 amendments, the minister commented on Alex Cole-Hamilton’s suggestions about how we further protect those who we have to, including anyone who is involved in political life. The minister briefly mentioned setting up an independent review—I believe that that was the language that was used. That is very welcome, but I ask the minister to write to the Parliament or the Education and Skills Committee with more detail on that. Now is not the time to go into that, but I invite the minister to do that so that all members can read more about what the remit and timescales of the review will be and the expectations around it.

I will end my remarks in the interests of time. I thank members for their input on the bill. It has been a pleasure to work on my first piece of education-related legislation in the committee. I know that the committee’s hard work will continue as we look to improve outcomes for all children throughout Scotland.

18:20  

Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab)

I draw members’ attention to my entry in the register of members’ interests, which says that I am the chair of the Hibernian Community Foundation.

In our stage 1 debate on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill, I spoke a little bit about it being the latest stage of a road on a map of protection legislation that goes all the way back to the start of the Scottish Parliament and the Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000, which was the first such legislation that we passed. The road on that map has passed through things such as the protection of vulnerable adults legislation, and this evening brings us to the end of this bit of the road. Although it was a bit bumpy at stage 2, we have reached a pretty good place. The minister and her officials have tried carefully to respond to the concerns of the committee and the witnesses, and that has been good to see.

I have made a point about how wide-ranging such bills are. Early on in the committee’s evidence taking, it was revealed to us that there are 1.5 million members of the protecting vulnerable groups scheme, so it is certainly legislation that affects many of our citizens. That was, of course, one of the reasons why there was a move in the legislation to having membership renewable every five years. The committee considered practical issues around that—for example, repeat fees and people having to remember that they have to renew their membership of the scheme—but the important thing is that the approach enables Disclosure Scotland to work more efficiently and effectively to monitor members of the scheme by enabling it to not have to monitor a significant number of members who are not using their PVG scheme membership. That is quite important and effective.

The early acts are all good examples of how having our own Parliament allowed us much more readily to catch our legislation up with other legislation, the modern world and other changes. We should not be surprised that, having set the disclosure scheme in place, we have come to a point at which it is necessary to clarify, simplify and modernise it. It had to take account of other legislation that we have passed, such as the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019. At stage 2, a great deal of work went into trying to ensure that that happened, and we have got there now.

That will not, of course, be the end of the process. For example, the Government recently recommitted itself to the incorporation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which may well mean a legislative change that will come back to some of the measures on children and childhood offences. That would in turn mean that we would have to come up with another iteration of the scheme.

There is more immediate and quite important work—and not only the setting up of the group that was promised to Alex Cole-Hamilton earlier on. In the discussions, there were concerns—Jamie Greene mentioned this—about the fact that anyone under 16 could not be a member of the scheme, as that might make it difficult for people under 16 to volunteer at all. I think that the Government has committed to monitor that and ensure that that is not the case.

Similarly, the Children and Young People’s Commissioner Scotland expressed concerns about the impact of the legislation on care-experienced young people. I think that the Government has also committed to monitor that; I hope that it will be able to do so, perhaps as part of the care review implementation.

There is some immediate work to be done there, but the biggest piece of immediate work is for Disclosure Scotland. As colleagues will remember, when the original scheme was introduced, there was a period when it took quite a long time for disclosure checks to come through, which caused great difficulty for many voluntary organisations and workplaces. Disclosure Scotland made us promises that it could make the legislation work. Let us hope that it is right. I think the legislation in now a place where Disclosure Scotland should be able to make it work. We will certainly support the bill at decision time.

18:25  

Ross Greer (West Scotland) (Green)

I start by reminding members that I am a current member of the PVG scheme, through the Church of Scotland.

Rehabilitation and reintegration into society for people who have committed offences in the past is a key part of creating a more just and safe society, but it must be balanced with safeguarding vulnerable people against those who might still pose a risk.

Getting that balance wrong has serious consequences. A system that is too punitive creates cycles of reoffending, because people with past convictions face obstacles to mainstream employment and are instead pushed to the periphery of society. That is still very much part of the reality here in Scotland, despite our efforts. There are no shortage of examples of more punitive systems, in which reoffending rates are even worse.

Being too lenient, however, could leave people, especially vulnerable people, at risk, so we would be failing in our duty to safeguard their wellbeing.

The disclosure system must balance those issues and set out robust procedures for when past convictions should be disclosed. Over time, the system has become pretty complicated. Its legal framework stems in large part from the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974, but since then a significant volume of further legislation and statutory instruments by the United Kingdom Parliament and then the Scottish Parliament, as well as court cases, have created new rules and schemes.

As a PVG scheme member, I certainly welcome the bill’s aim of simplifying and strengthening the system. That is not an easy task, as the Education and Skills Committee saw at stages 1 and 2. Although the committee was broadly supportive of the aims of the bill, a number of issues were raised about aspects of the current system and about proposed changes that required to be addressed.

I was not the only one to express concerns about the impact of barring under-16s from PVG membership—which Iain Gray and Jamie Greene mentioned—while still permitting them to engage in regulated work, and simultaneously making it an offence for anyone aged 16 or over to engage in regulated work without PVG membership.

Currently, several hundred under-16s are engaged in such roles, mostly on a voluntary basis. My primary concern was that organisations—often small voluntary groups—might understand the message to be that under-16s could no longer engage in such voluntary work or that, even if they were technically allowed to, the legally safest option for the organisation would be to avoid that.

Another concern that is worth noting again is that the small number of under-16s who present a risk and are barred by ministers from working with vulnerable groups could slip through the net, were the PVG scheme not to apply to them.

I appreciate the Government’s position that having under-16s in a continuously monitored scheme is disproportionate and that, in any case, they should not be engaging in regulated work without an adult present who is a PVG scheme member. I also understand that other disclosure products are available. The argument was finely balanced for me, but I am content with the Government’s commitment to monitor the impact of the changes on young people’s participation in volunteering, and to communicate clearly the other available disclosure products. I note that the introduction of the offence of engaging in regulated work without PVG membership will not apply to those young people.

I acknowledge that the literal handful of under-16s who are barred and who pose a risk should be monitored by other statutory services, thereby preventing their engaging with vulnerable groups. However, as I said at stage 1, reliance primarily on overstretched social work departments is far from perfect, particularly when individuals may move between local authorities, which is when communication between services often breaks down.

The other substantive concern that I raised at stage 1 related to the two-part test for level 2 disclosures, to be established at a later date following consultation of stakeholders. Although I appreciate the importance of such consultation, the arrangements could have left parts of the system dealing directly with balancing privacy and safeguarding, without any parliamentary scrutiny. I am pleased that the Government lodged amendments at stage 2 to address that issue by providing further provisions on how the test should be applied.

I also welcome the changes that have been introduced to address other issues that MSPs and organisations including Scottish Women’s Aid raised at stages 1 and 2.

The Scottish Greens welcome the steps to simplify and strengthen the disclosure system. We thank the bill team, the committee clerks and those who contributed evidence for working towards a set of proposals that we are happy to support.

18:30  

Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD)

This debate concludes my first full experience of scrutinising legislation in the Scottish Parliament since I was elected last summer. I record my thanks to the Education and Skills Committee’s clerks and the legislation team, who guided me through the process. I also thank my committee colleagues for their support. I have seen that ahead of any legislative reform a power of work goes on behind the scenes. That is even more impressive in the current context, so I pay tribute to all those who are somehow keeping Parliament ticking in these extraordinary times.

In the stage 1 debate, I said that

“the bill has the potential to make genuine, positive changes to the disclosure process.”—[Official Report, 16 January 2020; c 73.]

I will focus on a couple of the specific ways in which the bill will, after it is passed today, do that.

The bill will make it possible for people to apply for and receive disclosures digitally, which is an important and significant step for the future. It has taken a pandemic to prove that parts of Scotland’s administration are pointlessly reliant on paper, which is no longer the way that the world works. Offline alternatives are obviously still needed, and I still have some concerns about information technology capacity, given that 1.2 million people might need to apply for PVG membership as the renewal system gets under way. However, I am hopeful that if the disclosure system can maintain accessibility and make the move a success, it will create a precedent that other systems can follow.

The bill also makes sensible changes to the PVG scheme. The move to renewable five-year membership, which will be mandatory for people in regulatory roles, puts the scheme back in line with reality. Disclosure Scotland says that 20 per cent of those who are currently included in the scheme do not need to be in it, which means that hundreds of thousands of people are being monitored for no reason. Ending lifetime membership should address that pointless intrusion and the needless burden on Disclosure Scotland.

I am also glad that the bill will end automatic disclosure of childhood offences that are committed between the ages of 12 and 17. Mistakes that people make in their early years should not prejudice their adult life chances. Scotland still has some way to go, as we strive towards incorporation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, but I welcome each move that is made in that direction.

As I said, the bill will make good changes to the disclosure system, but I cannot finish without mentioning the amendments that my colleague Alex Cole-Hamilton lodged at stages 2 and 3, which seemed to be completely in line with the bill’s policy aims. It is clear that politicians fit within the scope of the bill’s definition of people who hold “power or influence”, and that situations can and do arise as part of an elected representative’s role in which such power or influence could be used improperly. It is not enough to say that it should not be used in that way; the point is that it could be.

Although Alex Cole-Hamilton did not press amendment 39, I hope that, given his work to raise the issue, and the welcome announcement by the Minister for Children and Young People that there will be an independent review to look at the safeguarding issue, there will be a change in the future. On that hopeful note, I say that I am happy to support the bill today.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

We move to the open debate, with speeches of four minutes. We are already quite well over time, so brevity would be appreciated by everyone.

18:33  

Clare Adamson (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)

I thank colleagues who have already covered many of the points that I wanted to make about the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill. I am very thankful to our clerks and to all those who took part in the bill process at stage 1.

I remember an evening event at Parliament, in Queensberry house, that went on quite late. People had travelled from far and wide to take part in a focus group. That would almost be unheard of now, but it happened just before we went into lockdown. It would no doubt happen via Zoom, nowadays.

The current crisis has delayed proceedings a little, and it seems to be a long time since we last discussed the bill in the chamber, but—as many members have said—it is now in a good place.

The work that has been done by stakeholders, the bill team and the Government is evident from the ease with which the bill has gone through stage 3 this afternoon, and from the consensus on it that has been expressed by members from across the chamber.

I would like to highlight one aspect that came to light in the evidence that was heard by the focus groups. The bill’s progressive nature can be seen from its approach to the impact on young people of disclosure of convictions that they accrued when they were younger. We heard emotional evidence from those who took part in the focus groups. Robert Dorrian asked us to recognise adolescence as

“a unique phase of life by ending the automatic disclosure of convictions accrued while aged between 12 and 17 years and introducing an assessment by Disclosure Scotland acting on behalf of Ministers as to whether convictions ought to be disclosed”.

One of the people who attended from Who Cares? Scotland informed the committee that although people who have been in care make up only an estimated 0.5 per cent of Scotland’s population, they make up 33 per cent of our youth-offender population and 31 per cent of the Scottish adult prison population. Those figures should make us all stop and think about what we are doing systemically in the care system that leads to such a situation. As Ross Greer rightly said, it is important that those young people had the opportunity to take part in the process of consultation on the bill.

Of course, we are now in the Covid era. If anything, the bill is now more important than it was before, because we want to harness the energy and willingness to volunteer that people have shown recently. We are in a good place to ensure that that can be done effectively in the future, through the bill.

I again thank everyone who has contributed to the process.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

We seem to have lost Jeremy Balfour—I hope, just temporarily. In the meantime, I call Daniel Johnson.

18:37  

Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)

Thank you, Presiding Officer. I am sorry—you caught me off guard there.

There are only 23 minutes left before we all want to be out of here, so I will try to be brief. I will simply remark on the fact that the reasons for our having the bill are important ones, as was set out by the minister and Iain Gray.

As Ross Greer said, the bill deals with the balances that exist between rights and responsibilities and between obligations and expectations I will add one more to the many reasons that others have already set out for the legislation’s importance. Giving people the ability to see information about them that is being disclosed at job interviews is a welcome development, because foreseeability is an important issue.

The main line of questioning that I pursued throughout stage 2 and during the evidence that the committee took at stage 1 was on the two-part test. One of the most important concerns that was raised then was about whether information that would not be disclosed in relation to a criminal conviction could be disclosed if it formed part of what is known as “other relevant information”—or ORI. Such principles being in the bill helps greatly. The guidance that will be made on them will clearly be hugely important in ensuring that such information is safeguarded, and that information that would not be disclosed as relating to a criminal conviction is not disclosed simply because it involves other relevant information.

The General Teaching Council for Scotland plays an important role in regulating members of the teaching profession. It has been in touch with me to state its concern that information that it needs in order to understand and assess whether people are right and proper candidates to be in that profession is simply not reaching it, from either Disclosure Scotland or Police Scotland, both of which have cited reasons relating to the general data protection regulation.

It is somewhat ironic that PVG information is required to gain accreditation in the first place. However, if there is new information about a police investigation, and even if Disclosure Scotland is made aware, the details would not be passed to the General Teaching Council, nor would the police alert it. That is an issue that requires some urgent attention. The Information Commissioner for Ireland has said that that information should be shared, and my understanding of GDPR legislation is that information sharing is permissible when it comes to child protection. I urge the Government to look at that.

18:40  

Rona Mackay (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)

I am happy to speak in the stage 3 debate on a bill that is incredibly important to the Scottish Government’s ability to protect the most vulnerable in society. In a nutshell, if passed today the bill will modernise and improve proportionality in the disclosure system, balancing public protection with the right to move on from past offences. It is a progressive and necessary bill. Significant amendment and improvements have been made in its journey from stage 1, and I thoroughly recommend that it is passed. As we have heard, it is a detailed bill with many parts and I commend the minister and her officials for getting it into such a good place.

The Law Society and COSLA support the development of a simplified regime for disclosure in Scotland, balancing an individual’s right to privacy with protection of the public interest, and acknowledge that the current disclosure regime is complex and difficult to navigate. As Daniel Johnson said, the two-part test was greatly debated in committee. The Scottish Government and Disclosure Scotland have outlined the approach on statutory and non-statutory guidance and the Law Society is keen to contribute to that work.

One of the most vital parts of the bill relates to childhood offending; children should not serve a lifetime sentence of discrimination and unemployability for offences in childhood, many of which were a result of adverse childhood experiences. The bill will end automatic disclosure of convictions that were accrued between the ages of 12 and 17.

For adults, the fundamental aim of the disclosure regime is to balance public protection with the right to move on from past offences. A theme of the policy discussions is how care-experienced young people can be particularly susceptible to becoming involved with criminal justice agencies, as the minister and the convener articulated. One care-experienced witness, Robert Dorrian, said that

“care-experienced individuals often self-exclude, which cannot be quantified ... Our members have told us that childhood convictions have prevented them from moving on from their past.”—[Official Report, Education and Skills Committee, 13 November 2019; c 6.]

That needs to change and the bill is an opportunity for that change.

The bill will simplify and modernise the disclosure system, with applications being made online. With digital applications and disclosures, the process is expected to be faster. However, the committee welcomed reassurances from Disclosure Scotland that non-digital means of seeking disclosures will remain.

I am delighted that amendment 25 defined the meaning of domestic abuse and I thank Women’s Aid for its involvement in that. Alex Cole-Hamilton’s amendments to the bill were withdrawn, but I was pleased to hear of the working group proposal that was outlined by the minister.

The bill is hugely progressive and will strike the balance between protection and allowing people to move on with their lives. I am happy to support it at stage 3.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

I am afraid that we have not been able to get Mr Balfour back—oh, he has arrived just in the nick of time. We have not made up all the time that I was hoping for, but never mind.

18:43  

Jeremy Balfour (Lothian) (Con)

I apologise, Presiding Officer. I will keep my comments brief; technology let me down there.

Unlike other members who have spoken so far in the debate, I come to the bill new. I read with interest the stage 1 debate and the amendments that were lodged at stage 2.

I come to the bill with a real interest; I am a current member of the scheme and I think that I hold three different certificates for volunteering that I do. One of the important aspects of the bill, which was pointed out by the Law Society of Scotland, is that the current regime is complex and difficult to navigate. I welcome the changes that the bill will bring about, because they will make the scheme easier. There is a difficult balance to get right: we want to protect children and vulnerable individuals in every circumstance but at the same time we want to encourage as many people as possible to come into volunteering.

As others have said in the debate, since the present crisis started, there has been greater awareness of what volunteers can do. We want to ensure that that continues. The bill has got the balance right. It will encourage people to volunteer, and it will make sure that they are the appropriate individuals.

I welcome the comments by the minister and others today about giving people a second chance. That is an important principle. We all make decisions that we live to regret. In particular, individuals make decisions in their youth that they live to regret. That can hold them back from being able to volunteer and give back to their communities, and the bill has done a great deal to rectify that.

I know that you want to move on, Presiding Officer, and I know that many of you have had a long day. Let me tell you, it is no more comfortable sitting on a chair at home than it is sitting in the chamber, so I will stop there. I welcome the bill and look forward to its enactment.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

Thank you, Mr Balfour. I am glad that you finally managed to join the debate.

We move to the closing speeches. We are not too bad for time—you have up to four minutes, Mr Gray.

18:45  

Iain Gray

I hear the “up to four minutes”, Presiding Officer. We find ourselves in the twilight of a wet Wednesday, in a sparsely populated chamber, in the middle of a deadly pandemic, and, indeed, in the shadow of a powerful debate on racism that ranged across the globe and across the centuries and dealt with matters of good and evil and life and death for far too many people. At this stage, it really is the truth to say that less is more.

However, I want to say this. We should be proud of our Parliament and pleased with ourselves for doing this today. Passing the bill is a symbol of something very important. The purpose of the disclosure regime is to make two things possible in safety. The first is the professional caring and nurturing of the vulnerable—teaching, caring, helping children and supporting people with disabilities. The second is all the volunteer-supported activity in our communities, which adds so much richness to our lives and opens so many doors that our young people would otherwise never even get to stand in front of—youth clubs, Scouts, the Boys Brigade, every kind of sports club that we can think of, and more besides. Those are things that create joy in our lives, and disclosure is about ensuring that they can happen in the confidence of safety from any who would pervert them for their predatory purpose.

Those are the very things that Covid has closed down. Caring has become a front-line battle, and the fun and companionship of sport and clubs has closed down all together. Hibernian Community Foundation, which I chair, usually runs children’s community football and holiday camps across the whole of the south of Scotland. We do not expect that to start again for a very long time, but start again it will. Taking the time today to pass the bill, even if much of what it effects is in abeyance, signals our hope, confidence and determination that those activities, which enrich our normal lives with joy and fun and caring, will be back. Children will play and learn again, and people will meet together again to socialise and support each other—and they will do so in safety.

That is not a bad night’s work.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

I do not think that your card is in properly, Mr Halcro Johnston. In fact, it is not in at all. It is not as if we have all the time in the world here. [Laughter.]

18:49  

Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con)

My apologies, Presiding Officer. I thank all my fellow speakers for giving me so much time to expand on the points that I want to make today.

Increasingly, organisations—from businesses to those in the public sector—are faced with difficult questions about safeguarding vulnerable people and how they accommodate people who have previously been convicted of crime. There has always been a delicate balance to maintain, and it reaches to the heart of our justice system. A great deal has been said about the sometimes competing interests of retribution, rehabilitation and reparation.

In more practical terms, we know all too well the problems that are faced by institutions when vulnerable people, especially children, have not been adequately safeguarded. Too many lives have been destroyed and too many people still carry the scars—physical and mental—of abuse that could have been prevented. It is right that the needs of victims and those who are at risk come uppermost in our considerations, but we must recognise the broader needs of society and those who have criminal convictions. That is what the minister dubbed

“the right of people to move on from their past behaviour.”—[Official Report, 16 January 2020; c 55.]

Criminal behaviour carries—in many cases, quite properly—a stigma. However, once a person is released into the community, we cannot expect them to find constructive rehabilitation if they cannot contribute through employment but also, if appropriate, through other means, such as volunteering.

The bill is welcome. It streamlines a complex system and helps users to navigate it more effectively. Some of the work at stage 2 has also improved the bill. The need for effective rehabilitation for people who committed offences as children is even more pressing. The broad direction of travel seems to have been widely welcomed.

The bill places weighty powers in the hands of the Scottish Government to decide what is reasonable in any particular case. Such powers must clearly be used sensibly, with consideration given not only to what is serious but to whether something presents a serious future risk. Undoubtedly, a number of the provisions will have to be monitored once they are implemented. That is not a criticism of the Government’s bill but simply an acknowledgement of the difficulties that are inherent in this area of law.

The bill makes sensible changes to a vital system that provides protection for some of the most vulnerable in our society. There are a great many provisions in the bill, and it would be impossible to touch on them all, despite their importance. However, what is necessary is that the principles and purpose of the systems that the bill creates and modifies are foremost in our minds. The proposals make a number of substantial improvements. Conservative members will support the bill.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

Given how things have gone, I ask the minister to speak for a wee bit longer than her allotted time. [Laughter.] It would be useful if you could take us to just before decision time.

18:52  

Maree Todd

Thank you, Presiding Officer. I am hastily replacing all the pages in my speech.

I thank all members for their contributions today. Again, I thank the Education and Skills Committee for its detailed scrutiny of the bill. The bill is technical, and it has been difficult for all of us to understand its drafting and detail. However, the meaning of the bill is very clear; it serves a powerful purpose in our society.

I thank the bill team, which has been mentioned several times by members from across the chamber. It has, indeed, done a sterling job of working with stakeholders and parliamentarians to ensure that we understand the detail of the bill. If members will indulge me for one moment, I note that the bill team leader has a significant birthday today. I hope that he is watching at home with a wee glass in hand, so well done Kevin Lee and happy significant birthday.

The passage of the bill will not be the end of the journey. It is the vehicle by which to provide greater protection, opportunity and flexibility to people and businesses in Scotland. As I set out previously, the Scottish Government will consult widely on disclosure fees before the regulations are laid for the Parliament’s consideration. I understand all the more acutely at this time how important that will be to individuals and to different sectors. We have a long-standing commitment to waiving fees for volunteers on the PVG scheme who are with qualifying voluntary organisations, and that will continue under any revised arrangements. As a temporary measure, we have also removed the fee on applications for key workers and volunteers who are contributing to Scotland’s response to Covid-19.

Engagement does not end with the bill. If the bill is passed, as I hope it will be this evening, we will continue to learn from stakeholders and the many communities with an interest in the bill. We will work in collaboration with them to find out more about what works best, and we will welcome scrutiny and challenge.

Daniel Johnson mentioned the General Teaching Council for Scotland, which I will use as an example. It is vital that we work with stakeholders to get things right for them. It is vital that we are able to share certain information with regulators for the purpose of safeguarding, which is why my officials have engaged with the GTCS and other regulatory bodies on that matter.

After the GTCS raised concerns with Disclosure Scotland, it reviewed the practice and made changes so that when Disclosure Scotland notifies the GTCS that a teacher is being considered for listing it will always state the source of that information. That will allow the GTCS to use its powers to ask for the information from the organisation that owns it. Recent improvements have focused on better communication between the GTCS and Disclosure Scotland about such cases.

Daniel Johnson

Will the minister reflect on the point about the police, which the GTCS said are also part of the issues that it faces in obtaining the information?

Maree Todd

I am certainly happy to work to continue to improve the information-sharing relationship, because it is important. I have to make clear that if new information is added to a scheme member’s record that results in the scheme member being placed under consideration for listing, regulatory bodies and employers would be notified.

Disclosure Scotland has developed a new information technology system and it now controls that by itself, rather than being dependent on an external supplier. That has enabled it to quickly implement solutions in response to Covid-19. That would have been significantly more challenging under the previous system. Its ability to quickly change the system allows Disclosure Scotland to make positive, sustainable improvements, which will enhance its ability to deliver the bill and protect vulnerable groups. The bill’s implementation will build on the existing new system at Disclosure Scotland, and the estimated costs that are set out in the bill’s financial memorandum remain valid.

It is important to highlight the significant work that has been undertaken at Disclosure Scotland in response to the Covid-19 crisis. The requirements of home working and the national imperative to get health and care workers checked without delay required Disclosure Scotland to rapidly deliver change; its response has been phenomenal. Stakeholder feedback about the changes that it has made has been incredibly positive, and I thank everyone at Disclosure Scotland who has made that possible during these unprecedented times.

Although, of course, Disclosure Scotland needs to be in a position to implement the provisions, stakeholders must be ready, too. Digital delivery is only one aspect of implementing these provisions. Some elements of the bill will alter how organisations approach their recruitment practices, and we need to ensure that those organisations are confident about their new rights and responsibilities before the provisions of the bill come into force. True to our approach from the outset of reviewing Scotland’s disclosure system, we will work closely with the stakeholders to map out the steps from the current situation to the post-bill services.

The transition from regulated work to regulated roles must be handled very carefully, at a pace that stakeholders are comfortable with. Stakeholders have been very clear about wanting to do this in a collaborative and iterative way. These changes will not happen overnight. It is not only Disclosure Scotland that needs to be ready; stakeholders must be ready, too.

We are committed to developing better training and guidance, which will be co-designed with stakeholders to ensure that it is more targeted and suits the needs of our users—including children, young people and those who support people with convictions. This bill shows that we are absolutely focused on protecting the most vulnerable people in our society, but also that we recognise that people can—and do—change. It offers a more responsive and individualised approach to disclosure. Together with other recent acts, including the Management of Offenders (Scotland) Act 2019 and the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019, it will transform the situation for Scotland’s children and young people, so many of whom have been marginalised and stigmatised because of state disclosure.

At stage 1 of the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019 we heard moving testimony from Lynzy Hanvidge.

Unfortunately, Lynzy’s story is not unique, and care-experienced young people are more likely to have interactions with the criminal justice system. In recognition of that, the provisions of this bill—building on the Age of Criminal Responsibility (Scotland) Act 2019—have been developed. I believe that they will have a transformational impact on the life chances of someone like Lynzy. The bill provides that some of the barriers to a better future can be removed.

I am delighted to commend the bill to Parliament.

10 June 2020

Final vote on the Bill

After the final discussion of the Bill, MSPs vote on whether they think it should become law.

Video Thumbnail Preview PNG

Final vote transcript

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)

The first question is, that amendment S5M-22004.1, in the name of Pauline McNeill, which seeks to amend motion S5M-22004, in the name of Christina McKelvie, on showing solidarity with anti-racism, be agreed to.

Amendment agreed to.

The Presiding Officer

The next question is, that amendment S5M-22004.2, in the name of Patrick Harvie, which seeks to amend motion S5M-22004, in the name of Christina McKelvie, be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Presiding Officer

There will be a division.

Bob Doris (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)

On a point of order, Presiding Officer. Not all the consoles are working, so the votes are not going to be recorded. Just before decision time, there was a flashing light on several of the consoles; they do not appear to be working, so how can we record—

The Presiding Officer

Mr Doris, your microphone is not on. Will you pause for a second?

For the record, Mr Doris just expressed concern that we are not confident that all the terminals are working. The vote that has been recorded shows a majority for the amendment, by 50 votes to 11. We will have a short pause while I consult the clerks and decide whether to carry on.

Bob Doris

Presiding Officer—

The Presiding Officer

We will resume after a short suspension, Mr Doris.

19:05 Meeting suspended.  

19:06 On resuming—  

The Presiding Officer

Thank you, members. Mr Doris, do you want to make another point of order, or shall I just explain what is happening?

Bob Doris

I apologise, Presiding Officer. My microphone is not working. I have tried three consoles and none of them is working, so I cannot raise a point of order.

The Presiding Officer

Mr Doris, I wonder whether you could produce your card—there we are. [Laughter.]

Bob Doris

I appreciate the complexities—[Inaudible.] I wanted to express my support for the amendment, but I was unable to do that. I tried three different consoles, each of which informed me that I was already logged into three consoles. I cannot explain that, Presiding Officer, and neither can you—I do not expect you to be able to explain it, but I expect my vote in support of the amendment to be registered in the Parliament.

The Presiding Officer

Indeed.

For members’ information, my console is showing the members who are present. Only four votes were not registered, but it is important that members who make the effort to come to the Parliament and want to signal their support for motions or bills get the chance to do so.

Therefore, I will run the vote again. The question is—

Clare Adamson (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)

On a point of order, Presiding Officer. The consoles have not cleared; they are still showing the previous vote.

The Presiding Officer

Okay. We will pause while the consoles are cleared, and we will run the vote again.

I believe that, when we run the vote again, the consoles will clear and members will be able to cast their votes. If the consoles do not clear, we will examine the proceedings.

I ask members to cast their votes now on amendment S5M-22004.2, in the name of Patrick Harvie, which seeks to amend motion S5M-22004, in the name of Christina McKelvie.

For

Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Baker, Claire (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Boyack, Sarah (Lothian) (Lab)
Brown, Keith (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)
Coffey, Willie (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Crawford, Bruce (Stirling) (SNP)
Denham, Ash (Edinburgh Eastern) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
Dornan, James (Glasgow Cathcart) (SNP)
Ewing, Annabelle (Cowdenbeath) (SNP)
Ewing, Fergus (Inverness and Nairn) (SNP)
Fabiani, Linda (East Kilbride) (SNP)
Findlay, Neil (Lothian) (Lab)
FitzPatrick, Joe (Dundee City West) (SNP)
Gibson, Kenneth (Cunninghame North) (SNP)
Gilruth, Jenny (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)
Grahame, Christine (Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale) (SNP)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Harvie, Patrick (Glasgow) (Green)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Johnstone, Alison (Lothian) (Green)
Leonard, Richard (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)
MacDonald, Gordon (Edinburgh Pentlands) (SNP)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
MacGregor, Fulton (Coatbridge and Chryston) (SNP)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Macpherson, Ben (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (SNP)
Maguire, Ruth (Cunninghame South) (SNP)
Martin, Gillian (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
McAlpine, Joan (South Scotland) (SNP)
McKee, Ivan (Glasgow Provan) (SNP)
McKelvie, Christina (Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse) (SNP)
McMillan, Stuart (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP)
McNeill, Pauline (Glasgow) (Lab)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Rennie, Willie (North East Fife) (LD)
Robison, Shona (Dundee City East) (SNP)
Russell, Michael (Argyll and Bute) (SNP)
Sarwar, Anas (Glasgow) (Lab)
Smyth, Colin (South Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Stewart, Kevin (Aberdeen Central) (SNP)
Swinney, John (Perthshire North) (SNP)
Todd, Maree (Highlands and Islands) (SNP)
Wheelhouse, Paul (South Scotland) (SNP)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)

Abstentions

Bowman, Bill (North East Scotland) (Con)
Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Carlaw, Jackson (Eastwood) (Con)
Davidson, Ruth (Edinburgh Central) (Con)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Kerr, Liam (North East Scotland) (Con)
Mountain, Edward (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Smith, Liz (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Stewart, Alexander (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

The Presiding Officer

The result of the division is: For 52, Against 0, Abstentions 11.

Amendment agreed to.

The Presiding Officer

The names of all those who voted will be available in the business team office—the chamber desk—several minutes after decision time. If members are concerned that their vote was not registered, I ask them to contact me by email later this evening. However, for the record, it is noted that Mr Doris cast his vote for the amendment.

The next question is, that motion S5M-22004, in the name of Christina McKelvie, on showing solidarity with anti-racism, as amended, be agreed to.

Motion, as amended, agreed to,

That the Parliament understands and shares the deep concern and horror that many feel about racism and racial injustice and police brutality across the world; expresses and shares the sympathy, grief and anger of so many at the death of George Floyd; stands in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement and considers that the UK Government must immediately suspend all export licences for tear gas, rubber bullets and riot gear to the US; recognises that public protest should be conducted safely in the current public health crisis; encourages people to continue to find safe ways to lend their voice to protest against racism in all its forms; believes that there is a responsibility on us all to identify and dismantle barriers of structural racism that exist in our society and institutions; agrees that it is up to all in society to tackle racism and advance race equality; agrees that Scotland should establish a slavery museum to address our historic links to the slave trade; regrets the fact that so many monuments and street names still celebrate the perpetrators and profiteers of slavery; calls on all levels of government to work to address this toxic legacy; believes that racism is a societal evil that we must all stand united against, and work to eradicate; welcomes the establishment of the Scottish Government expert advisory group on COVID-19 and the impact on ethnic minority communities, and calls for action now to best support black and minority ethnic (BAME) workers and their families as the health and economic crisis unfolds and for the collection of detailed data through Public Health Scotland on the impact of COVID-19 on BAME groups, to assist in identifying the reasons for differential impacts.

The Presiding Officer

The fourth question is, that motion S5M-21976, in the name of Maree Todd, on the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill at stage 3, be agreed to. As the motion concerns legislation, members should cast their votes now.

For

Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Baker, Claire (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Bowman, Bill (North East Scotland) (Con)
Boyack, Sarah (Lothian) (Lab)
Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Brown, Keith (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)
Carlaw, Jackson (Eastwood) (Con)
Coffey, Willie (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Crawford, Bruce (Stirling) (SNP)
Davidson, Ruth (Edinburgh Central) (Con)
Denham, Ash (Edinburgh Eastern) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
Dornan, James (Glasgow Cathcart) (SNP)
Ewing, Annabelle (Cowdenbeath) (SNP)
Ewing, Fergus (Inverness and Nairn) (SNP)
Fabiani, Linda (East Kilbride) (SNP)
Findlay, Neil (Lothian) (Lab)
FitzPatrick, Joe (Dundee City West) (SNP)
Gibson, Kenneth (Cunninghame North) (SNP)
Gilruth, Jenny (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)
Grahame, Christine (Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale) (SNP)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Harvie, Patrick (Glasgow) (Green)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Johnstone, Alison (Lothian) (Green)
Kerr, Liam (North East Scotland) (Con)
Leonard, Richard (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)
MacDonald, Gordon (Edinburgh Pentlands) (SNP)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
MacGregor, Fulton (Coatbridge and Chryston) (SNP)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Macpherson, Ben (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (SNP)
Maguire, Ruth (Cunninghame South) (SNP)
Martin, Gillian (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
McAlpine, Joan (South Scotland) (SNP)
McKee, Ivan (Glasgow Provan) (SNP)
McKelvie, Christina (Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse) (SNP)
McMillan, Stuart (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP)
McNeill, Pauline (Glasgow) (Lab)
Mountain, Edward (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Rennie, Willie (North East Fife) (LD)
Robison, Shona (Dundee City East) (SNP)
Russell, Michael (Argyll and Bute) (SNP)
Sarwar, Anas (Glasgow) (Lab)
Smith, Liz (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Smyth, Colin (South Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, Alexander (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Stewart, Kevin (Aberdeen Central) (SNP)
Swinney, John (Perthshire North) (SNP)
Todd, Maree (Highlands and Islands) (SNP)
Wheelhouse, Paul (South Scotland) (SNP)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)

The Presiding Officer

The result of the division is: For 63, Against 0, Abstentions 0.

Motion agreed to,

That the Parliament agrees that the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill be passed.

The Presiding Officer

The motion has been agreed to, and the Disclosure (Scotland) Bill is passed. [Applause.]

The next question is, that motions S5M-22000 to S5M-22003 inclusive, in the name of Graeme Dey, on behalf of the Parliamentary Bureau, be agreed to.

Motions agreed to,

That the Parliament agrees that the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee be designated as the lead committee in consideration of the Welfare of Dogs (Scotland) Bill at stage 1.

That the Parliament agrees that the Local Government and Communities Committee be designated as the lead committee in consideration of the Travelling Funfairs (Licensing) (Scotland) Bill at stage 1.

That the Parliament agrees that the Health Protection (Coronavirus) (Restrictions) (Scotland) Amendment (No. 3) Regulations 2020 (SSI 2020/164) be approved.

That the Parliament agrees that the Scottish Animal Welfare Commission Regulations 2020 [draft] be approved.

Meeting closed at 19:12.  

10 June 2020

Scottish Parliament research on the discussion of the Bill

Disclosure (Scotland) Bill as passed

Disclosure (Scotland) Bill printing changes after the Bill as Passed

Printing changes are changes to the text of a Bill for which amendments are not required. It will not change the legal effect of the Bill.

This Bill was passed on 10 June 2020 and became an Act on 14 July 2020 
Find the Disclosure (Scotland) Act 2020 on legislation.gov.uk

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