You are here: silicon.com > Public Sector > News

Whitehall fights to keep ID card cost report secret

Department for Work and Pensions appeals FoI order...

Tags: ico, dwp, id cards

By Andy McCue

Published: 6 July 2006 12:20 GMT

The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is appealing against an order by the UK's data protection watchdog to release a secret report on the costs, benefits and risks of introducing ID cards in the UK.

The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) last month ordered the DWP to make the details of the report public after a complaint by Liberal Democrat MP Mark Oaten in 2004.

Each central government department has conducted a secret feasibility report into how it plans to use ID cards and what the costs, risks and benefits are likely to be.

Oaten had complained to the ICO after the DWP refused to release its ID cards feasibility report in response to a parliamentary question he had tabled. Each central government department has conducted a secret feasibility report into how it plans to use ID cards and what the costs, risks and benefits are likely to be.

The ICO considered the complaint under the terms of the Freedom of Information Act and, after reviewing a copy of the report, information commissioner Richard Thomas ruled that the public interest in disclosing the information outweighs the public interest in keeping it secret.

Thomas said in his ruling last month: "There is clearly... a strong public interest in the public knowing whether the introduction of identity cards will bring benefits to the DWP, and to other government departments, and if so what those benefits will be... It will allow the public to make a more accurate assessment of whether the significant costs of the scheme are justified by the benefits it is likely to deliver in areas such as the prevention of benefit fraud."

The DWP had 30 days to either comply with the order or appeal and a spokesman confirmed to silicon.com the department lodged an appeal against the ruling earlier this week, just inside that deadline.

The appeal process is now expected to drag on for several months.

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

silicon.com Public Sector
Get the latest public sector news straight to your inbox. Sign up for the PS newsletter today!


  • Jobs
CVM Manager SAS background Credit Cards 45k-50k Northampton

Customer Value Management Manager- MI, Planning and List Management An established financial services organisation in the East Midlands area are ...

Basel II Modelling Manager 40-50K+ Exceptional benefits

You will have the opportunity to engage with and provide support to a number of departments around the client departments, working closely with ...

Credit Risk Analyst East Midlands 30-40K +Extensive benefits

Credit Risk Analyst East Midlands 30-40K +Extensive benefits Industry leading Financial services Credit cards Giant is seeking an accomplished Risk ...

Alan Brown
NHS IT to benefit Southern England - at last
Comment: Mental health care app ready for prime time

silicon.com
Inbox: ID guinea pigs, snooping database and CIO standards
"It's the divide and conquer approach, or 'how to eat an elephant'"

John O’Brien
London 2012: Will IT be hit by credit crunch?
Funding for tech could fall short

Peter Cochrane
Peter Cochrane's Blog: Government gaffe
Misunderstanding IT… again

Martyn Hart
Green IT changes outsourcing for all
Gov't guidelines bring carbon footprint to the forefront

silicon.com
Inbox: Data breaches, tech wages, ePassport woes
"If you offer training, you'll be fighting the applicants off with the proverbial stick..."

Agenda Setters 2008
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.




Quick Sitemap Links: