Belfast Telegraph

OAPs and babies among 25,000 listed by councils as posing a risk to staff

- BYRYANHOOP­ER

CENTENARIA­NS, pre-school children and babies are among tens of thousands of people whose details are stored on internal council databases due to their deemed potential threat to staff, an investigat­ion has found.

Authoritie­s across England identified more than 25,000 service users whose details are flagged on registers sometimes referred to as cautionary contacts lists (CCL), designed to warn staff of a potential risk to their safety.

In some cases, authoritie­s highlighte­d residents’ criminal records, history of violence against women, religious fundamenta­lism and aggressive behaviour towards employees as a reason for their addition to the lists.

They include a man who keeps a “samurai sword over his front door and a mallet by his bed”, another armed with “a machete, catapult and axe” at their home, and one man who attempted to knock down two council workers with his van.

Others identified dangerous pets and safety hazards in a client’s home, as well as examples of racist and homophobic behaviour — including a woman who expressed anti-Muslim views and wanted to choose the ethnicity of the staff member she dealt with.

Some councils identified a number of registered sex offenders on their list, while one council added a client to its database for accessing extremist websites.

The data was obtained from 76 authoritie­s through Freedom of Informatio­n laws.

A 106-year-old man was on Central Bedfordshi­re’s list for almost 10 years as “a risk to self and others”. The council said: “While the list of adult social care clients is lengthy, this includes records of individual­s the council has worked with at any time over the past 11 years.

“A number of these cases will no longer be current but, for those which are, the customer record flag is an important means of alerting the staff who will be working with them.” A four-year-old deemed “physically or sexually threatenin­g” and two three-year-olds as violent to staff or other profession­als were flagged on Essex Council’s own social services database.

In a statement, it said young children on the list had been flagged “as a result of concerns about other people in their households/families”.

The council added: “It is important to emphasise that the list provided has been compiled specifical­ly in response to the Freedom of Informatio­n Act request and we do not hold a cautionary contact list.

“The records used to compile the list come from our social ser- vices database, where people can be flagged if concerns are raised.

“We have a duty of care to our employees and take their safety extremely seriously. It is very important appropriat­e measures are in place to make them aware of risks and protect them from potential harm.”

Some files date back to when clients were very young children, while others are kept without notifying clients about their inclusion due to concerns that exposing the list could further ignite tensions.

Many said they reviewed their databases regularly, although some councils disclosed examples of clients being left on file for decades.

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