Big Brother
Britain: How much do you earn? Are you gay? Town Hall chiefs have
been ordered to find out
UK Daily Mail |
Dec. 21, 2007
By Steve Doughty
Every town hall has
been ordered to send out surveys demanding local residents' personal
information and opinions.
The forms will ask householders to give details of their children,
mortgage, ethnic background, religion and sexual orientation.
Civil rights campaigners yesterday called the survey 'intrusive and
very sinister', pointing out that any information handed over will
not be kept confidential.
Ministers have even given instructions that local councils must try
to disguise their involvement in the survey to avoid attracting
criticism.
And they have ruled
that the questioning must be paid for out of council tax and carried
out every two years.
The New Place Survey - which is expected to be launched next autumn
after trials in the spring - is likely to cost at least £15million
by 2012.
According to a consultation paper distributed by Communities
Secretary Hazel Blears, the justification for the survey is that it
will let the Government know if councils are hitting scores of new
targets imposed on them in the last six months.
But the questionnaire does not ask about householders' attitudes to
libraries, rubbish collections or schools - all of which are the
responsibility of councils.
Instead, it solicits information on whether people think local
parents are controlling their children's behaviour properly and
whether different ethnic communities in the area are getting on with
each other.
Questions on ethnicity and sexuality are intended to be used in
Government initiatives to promote greater numbers of local
councillors from minority groups.
But the demand that individuals and families supply a huge raft of
personal details for the survey comes at a time of deepening concern
about the State's thirst for ever-greater amounts of private
information - and worries over how that information is stored and
used.
Full article here.
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