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Showing posts sorted by date for query good practice guide. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query good practice guide. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Tuesday 21 June 2022

JUSTICE GONE WITH THE BIG YELLOW TAXI


Without the rule of law a society cannot exist as such.  The law might be unjust or weighted to suit particular interests or political factions but it must exist in practice or the only law which will be in place will be the law of the jungle.  I suppose as a rough guide a primative legal system emerged in England with the establishment of farming communities about 2000 BC although about 8000 years earlier in the Middle East hunter gatherers began the process of civilisation we know today. A few hundred years before Mosaic law was offered to the children of Israel the Babylonian Hammurabi issued the Code of Hammurabi which he claimed to have received from Shamash the Babylonian god of justice. Unlike earlier Sumerian law codes such as the Code of Ur-Nammu, which had focused on compensating the victim of the crime the Law of Hammurabi was one of the first law codes to place greater emphasis on the physical punishment of the perpetrator. It prescribed specific penalties for each crime and is among the first codes to establish the presumption of innocence. Although its penalties are extremely harsh by modern standards, they were intended to limit what a wronged person was permitted to do in retribution. The Code of Hammurabi and the Law of Moses in the Torah contain numerous similarities. For law in general or laws in particular to be respected by a population they must be simple to accept and understand.  Indeed we are all aware of the old adage attributed to Thomas Jefferson;   “Ignorance of the law is no excuse in any country. If it were, the laws would lose their effect, because it can always be pretended.”  But if simplicity in the eyes of the public is a necessity for "good" law it appears that as society has developed in ways unimaginable just a century ago that simplicity has all but disappeared and those who are charged with administering law and justice from parliament to the court are like sailors of old without a compass and only the stars as a guide. Indeed the changes and complexity of sentencing I personally experienced when active in the magistrates court are but a childhood game of snakes and ladders compared to the current sentencing guidelines at the crown court. 

Recently 21 year old Nathan Fairhurst admitted possession of a bladed article in a public place.  All readers will have heard various Justice Secretaries over the years preaching that such activity must be punished by a custodial sentence. Twenty years ago before sentencing guidelines were mandatory judges (and magistrates too when appropriate) would use a structured sentencing outline  and their own initiative and experience to sentence. Nowadays they must follow Sentencing Guidelines or explain their failure to so do.  The complexity of Guidelines is obvious. It was the US state of Michigan around a decade and a half ago which originated the idea of a formulated almost mathematical chart to aid sentencing.  Current practice in  England would seem now to be antiquated and could be replaced by algorithims as so many other aspects of our society are. 

With Justice Secretaries coming in and going out like commuter trains another common theme is the numbers of foreigners in our jails and the numbers expelled on completion of their sentences.  There are about 10,000 foreign nationals or about 11% of the total prison population. Under Section 32 of the UK Borders Act of 2007, non-EU “foreign criminals” sentenced to 12 months or more in prison are subject to automatic deportation. 4,700 foreign national offenders were removed in the year to March 2020. The number of such returns fell from 6,200 in 2016. Of course there is the ongoing scandal of those who evade deportation after completing their sentence as the chart below idicates. 

So when we read that Palfi Csaba Hungarian hard man will be deported we can only hope and not assume that the order will be carried out. The problem is that nobody cares about justice and the rule of law.  Of course legal bigwigs and government toadies will talk the back legs of donkeys to justify their support for the current legal fashion. Where was all the support for justice locally since 2010?  Now MPs are complaining that around half of all constituencies have no local court.  There was little opposition when the courts were being closed.  Now they wail and bemoan the loss.  


Nobody has said (sung) it better than Joni Mitchell when describing loss of essentials to our life experiences in the first two verses of Big Yellow Taxi

They paved paradise and put up a parking lot
With a pink hotel, a boutique, and a swinging hot spot
Don't it always seem to go
That you don't know what you got 'til it's gone
They paved paradise and put up a parking lot
Oh, bop, bop, bop
Oh, bop, bop, bop
They took all the trees, and put em in a tree museum
And they charged the people a dollar and a half to see them
No, no, no
Don't it always seem to go
That you don't know what you got 'til it's gone
They paved paradise, and put up a parking lot



Tuesday 14 January 2020

ALLOW MEDIA TO SPONSOR LIVE TELEVISING MAGISTRATES COURTS

For some years there have been musings from quarters on high on the televising of events at the criminal courts.  Since its inception the Supreme Court has been available for those interested to view on line. I`m sure that nobody then would have predicted that during the Brexit legal shenanigans prior to October 31st last year at its height over 2.8 million viewers gave up some of their valuable time to watch the live proceedings.  However with regard to the every day process of justice at magistrates and crown courts with the decline of local print media that process has become ever more invisible to the general public in England and Wales. However for those north of the border the criminal justice in my opinion bears much more relevance to this new millennium than its southern counterpart.  

  
Guide to Jury Service Eligibility and Applying for Excusal in Scotland
Are you qualified for jury service?
Subject to the information included in boxes A and B below, you are qualified for jury service if:
 you will be at least 18 years old on the date that you start your jury service;
 you are registered as a parliamentary or local government elector; AND
 you have lived in the United Kingdom, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for any period of at least 5 years since you were 13 years old.
You are not qualified for jury service if you do not meet all of these criteria, or if anything in box A applies to you, and you should complete the enclosed application and return it to the court as soon as possible.
You are ineligible if anything in box B applies to you, and you should complete the enclosed application and return it to the court as soon as possible.
You may apply for excusal as of right if the information in box C applies to you. If you wish to apply you should complete the enclosed application and return it to the court as soon as possible.
WARNING: It is an offence to serve on a jury knowing that you are not qualified for jury service or are ineligible or disqualified from jury service.
Part 1 of your application
You must fill in this section carefully or the court will not be able to process your application. Please make sure that you include your name, address, person ID (this is the number which is in brackets after your name on the front of your citation, it is 7 or 8 digits long), date of birth (where requested).
Box A – Persons disqualified from jury service
You are disqualified from jury service if:
 you are on bail in or in connection with criminal proceedings in any part of the United Kingdom;
 you have been sentenced, at any time, in the United Kingdom, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man –
 to a period of imprisonment for life or for a term of 5 years or more; or
 to be detained during Her Majesty’s pleasure, during the pleasure of the Secretary of State or the Governor of Northern Ireland (i.e. sentenced for murder while under the age of 18);
 or you have in the United Kingdom, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man –
 in the last 7 years (or 3.5 years where you were under 18 on the date of conviction) served any part of a sentence of imprisonment or detention, which was for between 3 months and 6 months; or
 in the last 10 years (or 5 years where you were under 18 on the date of conviction) served any part of a sentence of imprisonment or detention, which was for between 6 months and 30 months; or
 at any time served any part of a sentence of imprisonment or detention, which was for between 30 months and 5 years; or
 in the last 7 years been detained in a borstal institution;
 in the last 5 years (or 2.5 years where you were under 18 on the date of conviction) you were convicted of an offence and one or more of the following disposals was made:
 a drug treatment and testing order;
 a restriction of liberty order;
 or a community payback order;
under the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995; or
 a community order under the Criminal Justice Act 2003;
 a youth community order under section 33 of the Powers of Criminal Courts (Sentencing) Act 2000;
 a community order under the Criminal Justice (Northern Ireland) Order 1996; or
 a drug treatment and testing order under the Criminal Justice (Northern Ireland) Order 1998.
Box B – Persons ineligible
You are ineligible for jury service if any of the categories mentioned below apply to you:
 you are a Justice of the Supreme Court or the President or Deputy President of that Court;
 you are a Senator of the College of Justice;
 you are a sheriff;
 you are a summary sheriff
 you are a Justice of the Peace;
 you are the chairman or the president, the vice chairman or vice president, the registrar or assistant registrar of any tribunal;
 you have, at any time within the 10 years immediately preceding the date at which your eligibility for jury service is being considered, come within any description listed above in this box.
 you are an Advocate or a solicitor, whether or not in actual practice as such;
 you are an advocate’s clerk;
 you are an apprentice of, or a legal trainee employed by, solicitors;
 you are an officer or staff of any court if your work is wholly or mainly concerned with the day to day administration of the court;
 you are employed as a shorthand writer in any court;
 you are a Clerk of the Peace or one of their deputies;
 you are a member of or staff of the Scottish Police Authority
 you are an Inspector of Constabulary appointed by Her Majesty;
 you are an assistant inspector of constabulary appointed by the Secretary of State.
 you are a constable of the Police Service of Scotland (including constables on temporary service within the meaning of section 15 of the Police and Fire Reform (Scotland) Act 2012.
 you are a constable of any constabulary maintained under statute;
 you are a person employed in any capacity by virtue of which you have the powers and privileges of police constables;
 you are a special constable;
 you are a police cadet
 you are person appointed under section 26(1) of the Police and Fire Reform (Scotland) Act 2012.
 you are a member of the National Criminal Intelligence Service;
 you are a member of the Service Authority for the National Criminal Intelligence Service or a person employed by that Authority under section 13 of the Police Act 1997;
 you are an officer of the National Crime Agency;
 you are an officer of prisons, remand centres, detention centres, borstal institutions and young offenders institutions;
 you are a prison monitoring co-ordinator appointed under section 7A(2) of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1989 and independent prison monitor appointed under section 7B (2)(a) of that Act
 you are a prisoner custody officer within the meaning of section 114(1) of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994;
 you are a procurator fiscal within the meaning of section 307(1) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, or are employed as a clerk or assistant to such procurators fiscal;
 you are a messenger at arms or sheriff officer;
 you are a member of a children’s panels;
 you are a reporter appointed under section 36 of the Social Work (Scotland) Act 1968 or are a member of a reporter’s staff;
 you are a director of social work appointed under section 3 of the Social Work (Scotland) Act 1968 or are employed to assist such directors in the performance of such of their functions as relate to probation schemes within the meaning of section 27 of that Act;
 you are a member of the Parole Board for Scotland; or
 you have, at any time within the 5 years immediately preceding the date at which your eligibility for jury service is being considered, come within any description contained in the categories above in box B;
 you have, at any time within the 5 years immediately preceding the date at which your eligibility for jury service is being considered, been a member or employee of the Scottish Police Services Authority.
SCS003Pilot
 you are a member or employee of the Scottish Criminal Case Review Commission;
 you are a chief officer of a community justice authority established under section 3 of the Management of
Offenders etc. (Scotland) Act 2005;
 you are a person who is receiving medical treatment for a mental disorder and are either –
 for the purposes of that treatment, detained in hospital under the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003 or the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995;
 for the time being subject to guardianship under the Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000.
Are you eligible to apply for excusal?
Box C – Persons excusable as of right
If you come within one of the categories noted below, you have the option to apply to the court to be excused as of right. Please Note: you will only be excused ‘as of right’ if you apply within 7 days of receiving the Jury Citation. If you apply outwith this period then you will be required to state a good reason for excusal. The clerk of court will consider your request, taking account of all relevant circumstances and you may be required to attend for jury service. This does not apply if you are aged 71 or over - in these circumstances you can apply for
exemption up until the date you attend court.
 you are a peer or peeress entitled to receive writs of summons to attend the House of Lords;
 you are a member of the House of Commons;
 you are an officer of the House of Lords;
 you are an officer of the House of Commons;
 you are a member of the Scottish Parliament;
 you are a member of the Scottish Executive;
 you are a junior Scottish Minister;
 you are a representative to the Assembly of the European Parliament;
 you are a member of the National Assembly for Wales;
 you are the Auditor General for Scotland;
 you are a medical practitioner; dentist; nurse; midwife; pharmaceutical chemist; or a veterinary surgeon or veterinary practitioner (if actually practising your profession) and are registered (whether full or otherwise), you are enrolled or are certified under the enactments relating to that profession;
 you are a practising member of a religious society or order the tenets or beliefs of which are incompatible with jury service.
 you are a person in a holy order;
 you are a regular minister of any religious denomination; or
 you are a vowed member of any religious order living in a monastery, convent or other religious community.
 you are a serving member of:
 any of Her Majesty’s naval, military or air forces;
 the Women’s Royal Naval Service;
 Queen Alexandra’s Royal Naval Nursing Service; or
 any Voluntary Aid Detachment serving with the Royal Navy.
However, if your commanding officer certifies that it would be prejudicial to the efficiency of the force of which you are a member, should you be required to attend for jury service, you may apply for excusal as of right up until the date you attend court;
 you have attended court for jury service within the last five years but were not selected by ballot to serve on a jury (this only applies where your previous attendance was on a date prior to 10th January 2011);
 you have attended court for jury service within the last two years but were not selected by ballot to serve on a jury (this only applies where your previous attendance was on a date on or after 10th January 2011);
 you have attended at court for jury service and were selected by ballot to serve on a jury, within the last five years;
 you were excused by direction of any court from jury service for a period which has not yet expired;
 you have reached the age of 71.
SCS003 Pilot V19.02.19
Applying for excusal
Box D – Applications for excusal on the grounds of ill health or physical disability
If you wish to apply for excusal on the basis of ill health or physical disability then you must enclose a medical certificate along with your response. This can normally be obtained free of charge from your GP, in terms of Article 4 of Schedule 4 and regulation 25 of The National Health Service (General Medical Services Contracts) (Scotland) Regulations 2018 (2018/66). If your doctor considers your condition is long term or unlikely to change, please ask your doctor to include this information in your medical certificate.
Box E – Applications for excusal due to other special reasons
If you wish to apply for excusal due to another special reason, for example commitments at work, cancellation of which would cause abnormal inconvenience either to yourself or others, or holiday plans which would be difficult or expensive to rearrange, you should complete the relevant sections of part 3 of the form. You must also provide evidence of this, for example booking confirmation or letter from your employer.
Whilst all applications for excusal will be considered sympathetically, you must understand that court staff may not be able to excuse you from jury service. Rules of court state that a jury cannot be balloted where there are less than 30 of those named on the list of jurors present in court, meaning that it may not be possible for court staff to excuse jurors in all cases.

English requirements are available here. Perhaps the biggest differences between the two trial systems is that the Scottish jury of 15 has to meet only a simple majority for a verdict to be reached and that there is the third verdict of not proven available. In Scotland rather than the police who lead an investigation in England it is the procurator fiscal who takes a much greater role than the CPS in the active role of investigation. "Double- sourcing" evidence is unknown in English law. In Scotland it describes the corroboration of evidence which is all important in serious offences.  In practice in addition to a complainants`s evidence there must be additional evidence preferably DNA related or else the case cannot proceed. It could be said that some aspects of the process are akin to the French way of conducting matters insofar as their examining magistrates initiate investigations and issue warrants. Indeed I have long advocated here and elsewhere that Justices of the Peace take a more investigative position especially when trials involve unrepresented defendants

However the major difference is that those wise Scottish legal eagles have allowed television into the criminal court.  That decision was further reinforced recently when edited sections of a murder trial were on our televisions recently  Admittedly this was not a live broadcast but it probably dismayed those in the senior English judiciary who would still murmur in private that things have already gone too far in removing the supposed sacred aura surrounding the legal system. 

For the last decade successive governments have allocated ever decreasing funds to a justice system which is more and more seen as having to pay its way in contrast to the historical concept that it had been considered a public service and not a pay to use activity. The demise of local court reporting which has been commented upon more than once on this site has left the door open for enterprising media companies to sponsor live TV broadcasting from magistrates courts. The financial input would be welcomed by HMCTS and the idea of "open" justice would be a reality.  It might not be until the end of this decade but I have no doubt it is just a matter of when and not if. 

Previous posts which might be of interest are available herehere and here.  


Wednesday 27 May 2015

WARRANTS OF ENTRY BY UTILITY COMPANIES....AN UPDATE

I began this blog almost six years ago initially at  http://thejusticeofthepeace.blog.co.uk/ and laterally here.  In all that time the most widely read posts with literally tens of thousands of views have been on the subject of utility warrants of entry.  From various analytics I have deduced that these have been read not by regular viewers to this or the previous site (which is still viewable) but by one off visitors finding it directly or by references from sites dedicated to assisting those summonsed to court on the pain of applications from mainly electricity and/or gas companies for non payment of accounts.  This is not surprising nor is the headline and story in this news medium and many others.

When I was sitting in applications courts I would regularly be handed a third of the bundle of applications and told by the chairman where to sign them.  There was virtually no discussion.  I repeat.......this was the normal recognised way of processing these matters with the only consideration that of the legal advisor that we must not delay forthcoming business. Even prior to being appointed an approved chairman I made my objections where and when I could that this was a disgraceful way to approve a possible forced entry to premises whether private or business.  And then came the currently hotly debated Human Rights Act incoporated into our legal system in 1998 and a couple of additional clauses were inserted by the utility companies into the information laid before us insofar as consideration had been given as to the make up of said households eg invalids, children etc and they thought their obligation was complete. Around this time I discovered The Good Practice Guide* which is reproduced after this post.  Whilst I was still a winger I attempted with little success to persuade chairmen of the benefits of applying the "Guide". Generally it was waste of time.  On taking the chair I began to impose the document on my wingers prior to 10.00am usually without any objection.  There was a sitting where the clock showed 10.30am and I was still questioning an application when the L/A told me quite bluntly there was no more time and we had to get on.  There was a heated post court discussion.  Over the next few years I gradually persuaded powers that be that it was an utter disgrace and an injustice not to investigate these applications.  In those early days more often that not my questions were answered by the reply, "Not to my knowledge, sir."  Indeed at one sitting an applicant awaiting his turn in the open court shouted out, "This is rubbish; never had to go through this before." He walked out.  My persistence eventually paid off.  In my court on every bench there is now an abridged version of the original document** (also reproduced below) which is available for every chairman for reference.  I am pleased and perhaps if I am honest a little bit proud  that before being kicked out my colleagues and legal advisors would refer to my efforts on this topic as making me the "expert" on the subject.

In the light of the news story I would ask fellow J.P.s to consider these guides if they have have not done so and perhaps consider how seriously they apply themselves when next they sit in applications courts.



                          *  ENERGY DISCONNECTION WARRANTS





BEST PRACTICE GUIDANCE



Under the Rights of Entry (Gas and Electricity Boards) Act 1954 a representative of a gas or electricity supply company can apply for a warrant of entry to premises to inspect or read the meter, to install a prepayment meter, or to disconnect the supply.



Applications for a warrant of entry must be made on oath under s2(1) of the 1954 Act.  In order for a warrant to be granted, the relevant company must satisfy the magistrate that admission is reasonably required, that consent has not been given by or on behalf of the occupier, and that relevant period of notice has been given.



When considering whether to grant a disconnection warrant, you should consider asking some or all of the following questions.  An explanation for the thinking behind some of them follows in italics.



Potential questions for company representatives





1)             How many attempts were made to contact the customer and were any successful?



There is no legal requirement on energy companies regarding the number of attempts to contact the customer in advance of a disconnection to assess vulnerability or discuss debt.  However, the Energy Retail Association, the dedicated trade association for energy suppliers, provided a typical example of the attempts made by energy suppliers to contact customers during the process in its report ‘Protecting Vulnerable Consumers from Disconnection’ (September 2004) as follows:

·                 Collections path duration – 5 months

·                 8 attempts to contact through correspondence

·                 2 attempts to contact by telephone

·                 2 attempts to contact by personal visit to the property

·                 1 attempt to contact by visit to court

·                 Final attempt to contact at warrant execution




2)             If the customer has been successfully contacted, are you satisfied that they are not, for reasons of their age, health, disability or severe financial insecurity, unable to safeguard their personal welfare or the personal welfare of other members of the household, and what evidence do you have for this?



It is generally accepted that defining vulnerability is not an exact science.  Energy companies currently apply the following definition, and have stated that no person who meets this definition has been disconnected since December 2003 or will be disconnected in future  – “A customer is vulnerable if for reasons of their age, health, disability or severe financial insecurity they are unable to safeguard their personal welfare or the personal welfare of other members of the household”.




3)             Has any indication been received from third party representatives (such as a carer, social worker, health visitor or physician) that the customer may be vulnerable?



4)             Are you satisfied that no member of the household is dependent on medical equipment that is operated by electricity such as a stair lift, electric wheelchair, defibrillator or dialysis machine?



In order to avoid being overly prescriptive in drawing up its definition of vulnerability the Energy Retail Association provided additional guidance to its members to ensure that genuinely vulnerable consumers were not excluded.  This additional guidance acts as a framework within which energy suppliers should operate their debt recovery systems, and where suppliers identify households in the following circumstances they are advised to consider whether the customer is vulnerable in accordance with the definition:

·                 A customer is caring for an elderly person in the household;

·                 A permanent member of the household is disabled and unable to support themselves or has a long-term medical condition;

·                 A carer, social worker, health visitor or physician has indicated that a member of the household may be vulnerable;

·                 Households on a low income/state benefit with young children; or

·                 A customer dependent on medical equipment that is operated by electricity e.g. a stair lift, electric wheelchair, defibrillator or dialysis machine




5)             Does the application for a warrant follow a broken payment arrangement between the customer and his or her supplier?  If so, what was the arrangement made?



Energy companies are expected to offer a range of help to customers experiencing difficulties as an alternative to disconnection, and Standard Licence Condition 35(d) for both gas and electricity supply requires companies to take into account the customer’s ability to repay debt.





6)             What is the total amount owed by the customer?



There is no legal requirement on energy companies for debt to reach a certain level prior to disconnection.  However, Ofgem’s annual report into supplier performance in line with the regulator’s Social Action Plan showed that the average amount owed to suppliers by consumers on a debt payment arrangement as of September 2005 was as follows:




 <£100
£100-£300
£300-£600
>£600
Gas
59%
27%
9%
5%
Electricity
62%
23%
6%
7%






7)             Has there been any dispute about the amount owed by the customer?



Ofgem, the regulator, and energywatch, the energy consumer representative, produced guidelines for energy companies in January 2003 entitled ‘Preventing Debt and Disconnection’.  These guidelines were intended to provide guidance on best practice for the industry.  In this guidance, it was suggested that, in situations where a supplier has clearly been in error and the consumer is not culpable, good practice is to provide means of redress, which may be financial or otherwise, and may include reducing debts or writing off debts over a certain age (mention Super Complaint); not blocking consumers if they wish to change suppliers; or accepting repayment over an extended period at least as long as the period over which the bill has accrued (notwithstanding the obligation under gas and electricity Supply Licence Condition 35d to take into account the ability to pay).




8)             Under what circumstances, when the engineer arrives at the property, would the disconnection not be carried out?



The Energy Retail Association has indicated that the final attempt by energy companies to contact the consumer to assess vulnerability and discuss debt is at the time of warrant execution and that, therefore, all field staff should be trained to recognise signs of vulnerability and be empowered to halt the disconnection procedure pending further investigation by suppliers’ priority service teams.  If it is assessed that the consumer is vulnerable according to the accepted industry definition or the additional guidance provided by the Energy Retail Association, the consumer should have their record flagged and be offered the help most appropriate to their needs.




9)             Under what circumstances will a prepayment meter be fitted at the premises?



The fitting of a prepayment meter (PPM) to recover debt varies between gas and electricity, which has led to the discrepancy in the number of disconnections between the two fuels.  It is not necessary for the consumer to be present when PPMs are fitted in most cases.  However, some suppliers are reluctant to fit gas PPMs without the consumer present on safety grounds.  The Energy Retail Association has indicated that fitting a PPM is now the preferred option to disconnection where it is possible to do so.




10)         Has information been provided to the customer about how they could reduce their bills in future by more efficient use of energy?



Good practice as recommended by Ofgem and energywatch is for energy suppliers, when staff identify a consumer who would benefit from energy efficiency advice, to be proactive in providing that advice by passing the consumer’s details to energy efficiency specialists within the company.




11)         What steps have been taken to ensure that the address is correct in relation to the supply point?



12)         What steps have been taken to ensure that the address is currently occupied by the person responsible for the debt?



Good practice as recommended by Ofgem and energywatch is for suppliers to make every effort to minimize the extent to which billing errors lead to debt or exacerbate payment problems.  Although rare, the above are potential examples of such an error.




13)         If in receipt of benefits, has any attempt been made to enable the customer to pay off the arrears using Fuel Direct?



Fuel Direct is part of the Third Party Deductions Scheme operated by the Department of Work and Pensions.  It allows for a deduction to be made from benefits at source to repay debt accrued to energy suppliers.  It is limited to consumers on income support, jobseeker’s allowance and pension credit.  Suppliers are not able to control who qualifies for Fuel Direct – this decision is taken by the local benefits office.  However, good practice as recommended by Ofgem and energywatch would be for suppliers to offer Fuel Direct to such consumers who are in debt and eligible and to approach the relevant benefits office.  Third Party Deductions will only be used when all other avenues of debt recovery have been exhausted and can be used to pay any outstanding debts and maintain the supply or to prevent any further debt accruing.
















Background Information for magistrates





Actions before applying for a warrant.



Whilst there is no legal requirement to do so, energy suppliers wishing to disconnect energy supply should make several attempts to contact the customer – by letter, by phone and in person - before moving to apply for a warrant in accordance with voluntary guidance published in 2004 by the Energy Retail Association, the trade association for domestic energy suppliers.  They can also deal with a third party agent, though they may not always succeed in establishing contact.  If, during contact with the customer, it becomes apparent that the customer is unable to pay the bill, suppliers’ staff will attempt to obtain further information about the customer or their dependents, including such details as their age, whether they are currently receiving benefits, the number of young children in the household or any special circumstances such as whether any members of the household are disabled or have special needs.



The typical number of attempts to contact the customer is detailed earlier in this document. 

  



Regulation on disconnections



Companies wishing to supply gas or electricity in Great Britain must hold a licence from the regulator, the Office of Gas and Electricity Markets (Ofgem), and must comply with a list of Standard Licence Conditions.  Of relevance to the issue of the disconnection of supply are Standard Licence Conditions 35 and 37A for gas suppliers and Standard Licence Condition 35 for electricity suppliers.



Limitations on possible disconnection




 The effect of these Licence Conditions is that gas and electricity suppliers should, as far as practicable, avoid disconnecting the supply where the customer (the bill payer) is either of pensionable age or disabled or chronically sick in the period between 1 October and 31 March (commonly referred to as the Winter Moratorium) and, in the case of gas supply, should not disconnect households where, to the knowledge or reasonable belief of the company, the customer is of pensionable age and lives alone or with other persons all of whom are also of pensionable age or under eighteen years of age between the same dates.



Safeguards and duties




In addition, energy companies are also expected to offer a range of help to customers experiencing difficulties as an alternative to disconnection, and Standard Licence Condition 35(d) for both gas and electricity supply requires companies to take into account the customer’s ability to repay debt.  Suppliers have a duty to accept payment by Fuel Direct, a system whereby customers on three qualifying benefits (Income Support, Pension Credit and Jobseekers Allowance) facing disconnection can pay a defined minimum which is deducted from benefits weekly.  Suppliers are also required to offer customers a Pre Payment Meter before they move to disconnect supply.     



Industry Vulnerable Customer Safety Net



In September 2004 the Energy Retail Association (ERA), the dedicated trade association for the six major UK energy suppliers, published a report on the issues of debt and disconnection in the energy sector following a challenge from Ofgem to industry to develop measures to protect vulnerable customers from being disconnected.  This report presented the definition of a vulnerable customer which member companies will seek to abide by, that “a customer is vulnerable if for reasons of age, health, disability or severe financial insecurity they are unable to safeguard their personal welfare or the personal welfare of other members of the household.”



References to ‘customer’ in the Standard Licence Conditions refer to the bill payer.  The ERA has stated that industry’s intention is to protect all those who are vulnerable and at risk from disconnection, which has prompted the inclusion in its definition of vulnerability that the bill payer must also be able to safeguard the welfare of other members of the household.



In order to ensure that genuinely vulnerable customers are not excluded from the definition the ERA has also produced guidance to suppliers on identifying vulnerability, noting five separate circumstances which, if applicable, could lead to energy suppliers determining that the customer is vulnerable.  These are:



  1. A customer is caring for an elderly person in the household;
  2. A permanent member of the household is disabled and unable to support themselves or has a long-term medical condition;
  3. A carer, social worker, health visitor or physician has indicated that a member of the household may be vulnerable;
  4. Households on a low income/state benefit with young children; or
  5. A customer dependent on medical equipment that is operated by electricity e.g. a stair lift, electric wheelchair, defibrillator or dialysis machine.





Ofgem/energywatch guidance




In January 2003 the regulator, Ofgem, and the consumer watchdog, energywatch, produced a set of guidelines aimed at improving suppliers’ performance in debt management and recovery and in reducing disconnection, identifying six key areas for action – minimising billing errors; using incoming calls to identify customers in difficulty; using customer records to target energy efficiency improvements (these reduce energy use and therefore cost, thus reducing the potential for debt); demonstrating flexibility in debt recovery; offering sustainable solutions to customers in extreme hardship; and helping customers who are unable to manage their own affairs.  Since January 2003 all suppliers have developed strategies for improvements in these areas.













Disconnection figures

Statistics published by Ofgem show that the number of disconnections for gas and electricity in the last five calendar years was as follows:



Year
Gas
Electricity
Total
2000
16500
300
19500
2001
26088
375
26463
2002
21780
995
22775
2003
15973
1361
17334
2004
2553
727
3280



It is accepted that the discrepancy between the figures for gas and electricity are due to the fact that it is easier to install a prepayment meter (PPM) for electricity supply than it is for gas, as in the latter case it is necessary for the customer to be present for safe installation to take place.

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Utilities Warrants – Questions for Applicants



1)                            How many attempts were made to contact the customer before the application today and were any successful?



2)                            Could the customer be vulnerable?



3)                            Are you satisfied that no member of the household is dependent on medical equipment that is operated by electricity such as a stair lift, electric wheelchair, defibrillator or dialysis machine?



4)                            What is the total amount owed by the customer and what period do the arrears cover?



5)                            Has there been any dispute about the amount owed by the customer?  How are you sure that you are right and they are wrong?



6)                            Could the arrears be met by an arrangement between the customer and his or her supplier? 



7)                            If in receipt of benefits, has any attempt been made to enable the customer to pay off the arrears using Fuel Direct?



8)                            Under what circumstances, when the engineer arrives at the property, would the disconnection not be carried out?



9)                            Has information been provided to the customer about how they could reduce their bills in future by more efficient use of energy?



10)                      Are you sure that the address is currently occupied by the person responsible for the debt?