ContactPoint Launched After Two Delays
At the initial launch of the database in January, Children’s Secretary Ed Balls was quoted as saying by the Guardian that "No system can ever guarantee that all children will be safe but we know ContactPoint will make a real difference." Apart from the usual information such as name, date of birth, gender, address and contact information, the database will include details such as “school performance, diet and even whether their parents provide a ‘positive role model’,” the Daily Mail reported in 2006.
Because of a series of concerns about data security, the installation of the database—which cost taxpayers an impressive 224 million pounds ($346 million)—has suffered two delays. According to the BBC, a 2007 report conducted by auditing company Deloitte and Touche stated that the security of the system could never be entirely guaranteed.
Fears about database misuse persist: To prevent information abuse, the government will shield the identities and profiles of the more than 51,000 children considered to be at risk, the BBC reported.