screenshot of the General Records Office homepage
The General Records Office says it is committed to providing birth, death and marriage records online
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Genealogists suffer as family records website stalls

Three years into project, millions of records remain unscanned

Andrea-Marie Vassou, Computeract!ve 20 Aug 2008
ADVERTISEMENT

Genealogists have criticised an indefinite delay in setting up a Government website that promised direct access to 171 years of family records, calling it “appalling”.

The Government had planned a website that would give free access to 250 million records of births, marriages and deaths in England and Wales from 1837 to the present day.

Currently genealogists must pay a £7 fee and wait ten days to receive a certificate by post.

However, three years into a £16m contract to scan the documents, only 130 million have been digitised and the plans have been put on hold.

The move has angered genealogists. Rob Alexander, director of the Surrey Genealogist records agency, said: “Most family history enthusiasts will treat this news with absolute dismay. It appears to be yet another example of Government getting it wrong when it comes to big contracts.”

Matthew Copus, a genealogist and family historian, agreed: “It is a pity that what could have been a flagship service has not been created, due, it appears, to incompetence and penny-pinching,” he said.

He also added that the records were also not as easy to obtain as they had been as the website was built as a replacement to the defunct Family Records Centre (FRC), which had let people collect paper certificates from various centres.

“Many genealogists and family historians are upset that not only has the FRC been closed – earlier than was planned – but the old paper indexes have been completely withdrawn," he said.

“This was not meant to happen until new, improved indexes were available, something which now seems a very distant prospect.”

The Identity and Passport Service (IPS) moved to reassure people that this was not the case. A representative for the agency said: “We remain committed to delivering the project to digitise births, deaths and marriage records.”

"The IPS and the General Records Office are now undertaking a comprehensive review of the digitisation programme to determine the most appropriate means of realising the benefits of the programme."

The representative could not, however, say when the project would be completed or who would pay for the rest of it.

See also:

Local authorities caught between “rock and a hard place" over surveillance laws  12 Aug 2008
image: passportGeneral Register Office and Identity and Passport Service to merge  15 Oct 2007
And find out if life expectancy is right up your street  16 May 2006

All Online
Tags: Genealogy

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| JAM Recruitment
Software Test Engineer 6 Weeks Contract £ 35 per hour Wiltshire We have an urgent need for a Software Test Engineer. Main Duties: ·Sound understanding of full software lifecycle ·Solid experience in requirements analysis ·Requirements ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
Software Test Engineer 3 Months Contract £35 per hour Wiltshire We have an urgent need for a Software Test Engineer. Main Duties: ·Sound understanding of full software lifecycle ·Solid experience in requirements analysis ·Requirements based ... more >
| Aston Carter
Major Investment Bank requires a Business Analyst to work within reference data IT. The reference data IT function is responsible for the three internal systems. One of the systems is a strategic repository for Client ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
Job Ref: CY - 27021979 Package: £25 – 42,000 +Bens Location: YORKSHIRE Job type: Occupational Health Position type: Permanent Hours: Full time Contact name: Mr Colin Youle Contact Company: JAM HUMAN RESOURCES Are you a ... more >
More job opportunities