EXPLANATORY NOTE
(This note is not part of the Order)

This Order amends the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 (Exceptions) Order 1975 (S.I. 1975/1023) (“the 1975 Order”). The 1975 Order disapplies specified provisions of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 (c. 53) (“the 1974 Act”) so as to permit questions to be asked about spent convictions and cautions in order to assess a person’s suitability for admission to certain occupations or to hold certain types of employment, licences or permits. It also permits spent convictions and cautions, or a failure to disclose them, to be a ground for excluding a person from those occupations or for making decisions in relation to those types of employment, licences and permits.

The 1975 Order also makes provision for a “protected conviction” and “protected caution” in respect of which the 1974 Act is no longer disapplied when a question is asked to assess a person’s suitability for certain purposes. The person is not required to disclose such convictions and cautions; and those convictions and cautions, or a failure to disclose them, cannot be taken into account.

Article 2(4)(a) of this Order amends the 1975 Order by adding a new paragraph to Part II of Schedule 1 (offices, employments and work), to cover activity relating to children which would constitute “regulated activity” in relation to children if it were it carried out more frequently. The effect is that a person’s spent convictions and cautions may be taken into account when assessing a person’s suitability to engage in such activity. Work which is “regulated activity” in relation to children, as defined in Schedule 4 to the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act 2006 (c. 47) before and after the amendments made by the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 (c. 9), is included in paragraph 14A of Part II of Schedule 1 to the 1975 Order.

Article 2(4)(b) of this Order amends the 1975 Order by adding a new paragraph to Part II of Schedule 1 to cover the chairman, members and staff members of the Independent Police Complaints Commission who have contact with vulnerable adults or access to information about such adults or children. The amendment means that a person’s spent convictions and cautions may be taken into account when assessing a person’s suitability to engage in such work.

Article 2(2) of this Order makes changes consequential upon the amendments described above.

Article 2(3) of this Order amends the 1975 Order by including judicial appointments (included at paragraph 1 of Part II of Schedule 1) in article 3ZA and article 4ZA, and removes the reference to judicial appointments in article 3 and article 4. The effect is that in relation to such appointments the 1974 Act continues to be disapplied even in relation to a “protected caution” or a “protected conviction”.

A full impact assessment has not been produced for this instrument as no significant impact on the private, voluntary or public sectors is foreseen.