The Security Industry Authority鈥檚 official launch on 2 April occurred in the wake of Home Office Minister John Denham鈥檚 shock decision to resign his tenure over the war in Iraq
As SMT went to press, Security Industry Authority (SIA) chair Molly Meacher and chief executive officer John Saunders officially launched the new Home Office body 鈥 aimed at licensing and regulating the security industry 鈥 at London鈥檚 Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre in Westminster.

The objectives of the new Authority are to raise standards, increase professionalism in the industry and 鈥渆xclude the criminal elements who abuse positions of trust鈥. These goals will be achieved by collaborating with the industry and other stakeholders in setting standards and criteria for licensing individuals and approving contractors and security companies.

One of the biggest challenges facing the SIA is to communicate effectively with the representatives and information providers of the 500,000 individuals working in the industry, and the many thousands of security companies operating across the country. The conference represented an inaugural step in that process.

Despite the shock resignation of Home Office minister John Denham from the Government (due to feelings evoked over the current military action being taken in Iraq), it鈥檚 very much 鈥渂usiness as usual鈥 for the SIA.

In the coming months, the SIA will decide which skills are needed to hold a licence. Those skills will vary according to the type of security work being carried out, and will be published as and when they are devised. Anyone applying for a licence will have to show that they have the appropriate professional ability for the job, even if they have been working in the industry for some time. Necessarily, this will probably entail attendance on an SIA-approved training course.

As the licensing programme rolls out in the prescribed sectors 鈥 wheel clampers and door supervisors are first to be regulated, followed by security officers and consultants 鈥 SIA inspectors will have the right to enter certain types of premises such as security company offices to check that staff hold valid licenses.

These inspectors will be working collaboratively with local authorities, the police and other agencies to ensure a co-ordinated approach to enforcement activity. Crucially, those operating in the industry post-licensing who don鈥檛 hold a licence themselves could face prosecution. The penalty on conviction in a Magistrates鈥 Court being six months鈥 imprisonment, a hefty 拢5,000 fine or (potentially) both.

The milestone launch conference, also due to be attended by Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir John Stevens and Thomas Berglund (chief executive of Securitas Security Services) was convened to set out some details for the first phase of licensing.

A full report on the event will be published in the May edition of Security Management Today.

For further information on the SIA, take a look at: www.the-sia.org.uk

  • Deputy First Minister Jim Wallace has announced that the Scottish Executive has approved proposals to regulate the private security industry in Scotland, and is to invite the SIA to extend its remit north of the border.

    The news will require an amendment to the Private Security Industry Act 2001, as well as consequential amendments to reflect the Scottish legal system.

    SIA chair Molly Meacher told SMT: 鈥淭his news represents an excellent opportunity to further the interests of the security industry throughout the whole of Britain by bringing consistency of conditions, training, standards and costs.鈥