Thursday, May 19, 2011

Reduce Red Tape and Unshackle Good Neighbours - says report

"A SUFFOCATING BLANKET OF RED TAPE and an insidious mythology about being sued are deterring millions of Britons, volunteer organisations and charities from helping out more fully in society" an independent report revealed this week.

The Red Tape Task Force, led by Lord Hodgson of Astley Abbotts, has spent nine months examining the myriad of rules and regulations which put people off giving their time and money to good causes and stifles the volunteer and charity sector in the UK.

In launching the report Unshackling Good Neighbours (PDF File size: 4.69 MB) Lord Hodgson said:
"The variety, diversity and contribution of the charitable and voluntary sector is one of the glories of our country and the Task Force has set out to find ways to assist its continued growth and development. But over recent years we’ve seen a real devaluation of common sense and trust through a tangle of rules and guidance which aims to eliminate risk from our lives but instead creates a risk of a society where people are afraid to help each other."
The Red Tape Task Force set about answering three questions: what stops people giving their time, what stops people giving money and what stops charities and voluntary groups and social enterprises growing? And after reviewing over 600 complaints about excessive bureaucracy and speaking to dozens of organisations and individuals, it has made six key:
  • Reform the law to clarify the extent of charity trustees and volunteer liability to encourage more involvement and participation by individuals
  • Eliminate regulatory duplication and repeated requests for the same information in slightly different formats, for example by Companies House, the Charity Commission and commissioners
  • Establish a Working Party to include representatives of the insurance industry and civil society organisations to address the insurance needs of the sectors
  • Encourage investment in civil society organisations by creating a new category of "social investor" and clarify the position of trust law with regard to charities
  • Simplify the licencing of fund-raising events and provide clear standard guidance across the sector
  • Encourage the out-of-work to get involved in greater volunteering and ensure they and Job Centre staff understand that it does not automatically affect their benefits and welfare payments
The Government Minister for Civil Society, Nick Hurd, has welcomed the report and invited Lord Hodgson to review progress on implementing the Task Force’s recommendations one year from now.

See from the Cabinet Office:

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Comments

About This Blog

Just might be of interest to those active in HU12 (post code area) communities and partnerships!?

Sitemeter

Blog Archive

Admin

Hedon Blog

  © Blogger templates The Professional Template by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP