What is the purpose of a DBS form? Why do all those involved in working with children and vulnerable people have to give evidence of every name change, address history etc? Show passport, driving licence, documents, proof of identity etc to a safeguarding officer? A name used briefly decades ago? Evidence of a failed marriage? Still on there.
Because of Ian Huntley and the Soham murders.
Because the existing CRB forms and checks didn't give the joined up approach that was necessary to stop him being employed as a school caretaker.
Because we decided that honesty and openness and a degree of rigour about the process was in the interest of Safeguarding.
So much so that, even though the DBS system was initially designed to run across organisations, each organisation in practice wanted their own copy ab initio. So those of us in teaching and youth work and supporting vulnerable adults often ended up with multiple DBS forms again.
And we carry on with the forms and the safeguarding training and open our past up and promise to keep no secrets because we know what the safeguarding risks are.
Being male massively increases them.
Yet one group gets a special concession.
www.ddc.uk.net/question/dbs-process-transgender-applicants/
"If the individual does not have a Gender Recognition Certificate, they should still contact the DBS’s Sensitive Applications Team. If the DBS check is going to reveal information in a previous gender/name the DBS will initiate contact before it is issued. If the individual has no criminal information then the DBS can remove previous names / gender so that they do not appear on a certificate".
So if I only want to employ a female carer for my frail elderly mother with dementia, can I trust the DBS certificate?
Does this strengthen or weaken safeguarding?
Oh, and for the record, only 7 deletions (most of them factual posts by R0
) on a thread of 400 posts, in case anyone is wondering...