Government says it will ignore the public on Policing and Crime Bill

8th June 2016 – The government has responded to the petition urging changes to Section 107 of the Policing and Crime Bill, stating shooting organisations won’t be formally consulted on future changes to the Guidance on Firearms Law.

The response, posted on the page with the petition and not signed by a minister or even a named bureaucrat, does, however, promise that shooting organisations will be consulted over the next edition of the guidance.

The response reads in full:

The UK has some of the toughest gun control laws in the world and we are determined to keep it that way.

The Government keeps the firearms licensing system under review to safeguard against abuse by criminals and to preserve public safety. Following Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC’s) inspection of firearms licensing , and their recommendation to put police guidelines on a statutory footing, clause 107 of the Policing and Crime Bill introduces a power for the Home Secretary to issue the police with statutory guidance on firearms.

This will allow existing safeguards around firearms ownership, for example background checks, medical suitability checks, and criteria around applicants with a history of domestic violence, to be enshrined in statutory guidelines. Other aspects of the existing Home Office guide will remain on a non-statutory footing.

The new statutory guidance will ensure that the highest standards of public safety are maintained. Responsible gun owners who pose no risk will continue to be granted firearms certificates by the police, as they are now.

The police must have regard to the guidance issued by the Home Secretary. Currently, because Home Office guidance is non-statutory, the police are not obliged to follow it. HMIC’s report on firearms licensing found that existing guidance was frequently not followed, resulting in an inconsistent approach between forces.

The Home Secretary will consult widely on the first edition of the new statutory guidance and will consider the views of shooting organisations as well as those of the police. The Government always aims to seek views from organisations likely to be affected by policy changes, and this is not a matter for legislation. The police must be able to implement the new guidance and are therefore listed as a statutory consultee.

The clause will be subject to Parliamentary scrutiny during the passage of the Bill.

Home Office

As UKSN’s author has written a good few times now, petitions demonstrably achieve nothing.

 

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