The Compulsory Electronic Monitoring Licence Condition (Amendment) Order 2021
Citation, commencement, extent and application1.
(1)
This Order may be cited as the Compulsory Electronic Monitoring Licence Condition (Amendment) Order 2021 and comes into force on 29th September 2021.
(2)
This Order extends to England and Wales.
(3)
This Order applies to—
(a)
(b)
any person released on licence on or after this Order comes into force.
Amendments to the Compulsory Electronic Monitoring Licence Condition Order 20212.
(1)
The Compulsory Electronic Monitoring Licence Condition Order 2021 is amended as follows.
(2)
In article 2 (qualifying offender)—
(a)
in paragraph (b)(iii), after “longest” insert “or equal longest”;
(b)
in paragraph (d), omit “at an address”.
(3)
“7.
Bedfordshire
8.
City of London police area
9.
Cumbria
10.
Derbyshire
11.
Durham
12.
Essex
13.
Hampshire
14.
Hertfordshire
15.
Kent
16.
Metropolitan police district
17.
North Wales
18.
Nottinghamshire
19.
Sussex”.
This Order amends the Compulsory Electronic Monitoring Licence Condition Order 2021 (S.I. 2021/330) (“the Earlier Order”). The Earlier Order requires an electronic monitoring condition to be included in the licence of persons described in that Order pursuant to section 62A of the Criminal Justice and Court Services Act 2000 (c. 43). The criteria include where a person is serving multiple sentences, whether the sentence which otherwise meets the criteria specified in that Order is the longest term; and whether the person is required to reside on licence at an address within a specified area, limited to those police areas listed in Schedule 1 to the Earlier Order. A person who meets each of the criteria is considered a qualifying offender.
Article 1 of this Order sets out the commencement, extent and application provisions. This Order applies to any person released on licence before this Order comes into force provided that during the period before this Order comes into force they were required to reside on licence at one of the six specified areas included in the Earlier Order. If satisfied, the changes to the Earlier Order made by this Order will therefore apply to that person after it comes into force. In particular that will mean the criteria include a requirement to reside on licence, after the Order comes into force, at any of the specified areas: the six listed in the Earlier Order together with the 13 added by this Order. This Order also applies to any person released on licence on or after this Order comes into force. If such person meets the criteria specified in the Earlier Order, as amended by this Order, the specified period for which an electronic monitoring condition will be included on that person’s licence in accordance with articles 3 and 4 of the Earlier Order will commence on the date of their first release on or after the date this Order comes into force.
Article 2 of this Order amends certain criteria set out in the Earlier Order which determine whether a person is a qualifying offender. Paragraph (2)(a) clarifies the criteria is a requirement for the person to reside on licence within a specified area, and not at an address within a specified area. Paragraph (2)(b) clarifies that for a person serving multiple sentences, the person will be a qualifying offender where a sentence meets the other criteria and is a term equal in length to one or more of their other sentences, and the terms of those sentences are longer than any others. Paragraph (3) adds an additional 13 police areas into those considered to be a specified area.
The full impact assessment of the effect of the Earlier Order on the costs of business, the voluntary sector and the public and is available from www.legislation.gov.uk.