UK Nanny State: Health and Safety Snoops to Enter Family Homes

Privacy and freedom have left the UK:

UK: Big Brother Government to ’spy’ on every phone call, email and web search (Telegraph)

Big Brother Britain: £380 a MINUTE spent on tracking every click online (Daily Mail)

Police in £9m scheme to log ‘domestic extremists’; Police rebranded lawful protest as ‘domestic extremism’ (Guardian)

Council bans British parents from public playgrounds, because they have not undergone criminal record checks (Telegraph)

UK: ‘Snoop’ power is used 1,400 times a day to intercept private data (Times)

UK: Government To Install Surveillance Cameras In Private Homes (Prison Planet)

Insane British Government Global Warming Ad: Panic, Little Ones, It’s The Carbon Monster (The Australian)

Now Big Brother targets Facebook (Independent)

Right to privacy broken by a quarter of UK’s public databases, says report (Guardian)


Health and safety inspectors are to be given unprecedented access to family homes to ensure that parents are protecting their children from household accidents.

New guidance drawn up at the request of the Department of Health urges councils and other public sector bodies to “collect data” on properties where children are thought to be at “greatest risk of unintentional injury”.

Council staff will then be tasked with overseeing the installation of safety devices in homes, including smoke alarms, stair gates, hot water temperature restrictors, oven guards and window and door locks.

The draft guidance by a committee at the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice) has been criticised as intrusive and further evidence of the “creeping nanny state”.

Until now, councils have made only a limited number of home inspections to check on building work and in extreme cases where the state of a house is thought to pose a serious risk to public health.

Nice also recommends the creation of a new government database to allow GPs, midwives and other officials who visit homes to log health and safety concerns they spot.

The guidance aims to “encourage all practitioners who visit families and carers with children and young people aged under 15 to provide home safety advice and, where necessary, conduct a home risk assessment”. It continues: “If possible, they should supply and install home safety equipment.”

The proposals have been put out to consultation and, if approved, will be implemented next year.

Matthew Elliott, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: “It is a huge intervention into family life which will be counter-productive.

“Good parents will feel the intrusion of the state in their homes and bad parents will now have someone else to blame if they don’t bring up their children in a sensible, safe environment.”

About 100,000 children are admitted to hospital each year for home injuries at a cost of £146m.

November 15, 2009

Source: The Times

1 thought on “UK Nanny State: Health and Safety Snoops to Enter Family Homes”

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.