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August 7, 2007, 9: ID cards In The Pipeline
The Home Office have
announced that the procurement process, which has now begun, marks the first
major steps towards a national ID card programme. Procurement began this week ,
with publication of a notice in the Official
Journal of the European Union inviting potential suppliers to get involved.
The notice will pave the way for a contract - known as a 'framework agreement' -
with some pre-qualified suppliers. The
Identity and Passport Service (IPS) will then be able to procure what it
needs from that group of suppliers once work gets underway on the identity
system.
For this programme, IPS will need companies and agencies that provide a range of
skills, services and supplies, in both the private and public sectors. The
programme will involve large, complex and secure systems, which will need to be
managed reliably.
The ultimate goal, says the Home Office, is to deliver a consistent,
high-quality experience to the millions of people who will ultimately have and
use ID cards. Home Office minister Meg Hillier said every step of the process
was important, as the National Identity Scheme will be a crucial part of the
UK's infrastructure:
'It has become increasingly clear that the methods we have
traditionally relied on to prove ID are outdated, inefficient, and open to
abuse,' she said. 'That has to end, and that is why we are taking the scheme
forward. 'We are committed to introducing the scheme carefully and securely,
minimising both cost and risk.'
The programme will provide one mechanism to prove identity. It
will end the current mix of methods in which people are identified through
letters or bills sent to their houses, or by producing passports or bank account
cards as forms of ID. This system is unreliable, and easily defeated by
criminals.
IPS Chief Executive James Hall has stated that the arguments for having an ID
cards plan in place are compelling, and the will to deliver such a system has
not faltered.
The
strategic action plan for the National Identity Scheme sets out the basic
timeline for the introduction of biometric immigration documents for foreign
nationals in 2008, and identity cards for British citizens in 2009.
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