COMMONS
Backlogs hit half a million at immigration service
13 July 2013
The Home Affairs Committee published its report ‘The work of the UK Border Agency (October–December 2012)’ on Saturday 13 July 2013 (Fourth Report, Session 2013-14, HC 486).
The Committee examines the work of the UK Border Agency (UKBA) on a three monthly basis. Following the abolition of the Agency we will continue to monitor the Home Office UK Visa and Immigration service on a three monthly basis.
Conclusions
The Committee found:
An Agency plagued by backlogs
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We were alarmed to discover in Sarah Rapson’s evidence session a further backlog of 190,000 cases in the temporary and permanent migration pool that were never revealed to the Committee before. The total figure for the number of cases in the backlog has reached over half a million (502,462). Whilst we welcome this admission from Ms Rapson and hope she is more forthcoming with this Committee then her predecessor, it is simply unacceptable that new backlogs are routinely revealed in Committee evidence sessions.
An exercise in rebranding
The immigration system will ‘never be fixed’
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In her evidence to the Committee on 11th June 2013 Sarah Rapson when asked if she thought the Immigration Service would ever be fixed she said: “I don’t think so”. The Committee were surprised by this revelation. Although we welcome Ms Rapson’s honesty, the Committee are concerned that the person tasked with ‘fixing’ the agency does not think the job will ever be complete. We are concerned this is an admission that Ms Rapson does not have the resources necessary to ‘fix’ the service. The Home Office should work to reveal the full scale of the backlog so that it is able to apportion the funds necessary to clear the backlog.
Chair of the Committee
The Rt Hon Keith Vaz MP said:
“The backlog of cases has now hit a staggering half a million people. This could fill Wembley Stadium to capacity six times over. It has risen by 56% in just three months. At the current rate it will take 37 years to clear and the Home Office cannot confirm that this is the last of the backlogs.
Theresa May described the UK Border Agency as ‘closed, secretive and defensive’, however, despite abolition nothing appears to have changed apart from the name. If people at the top are not replaced this will only be an exercise in rebranding as has happened in previous reincarnations. There should be no more bonuses paid to any senior management at the Home Office until the backlogs are cleared.
In evidence the Committee were told the immigration service would never be fixed. This is astonishing since reducing immigration is a priority of this Government. What the immigration service needs desperately is stability, the resources necessary to clear the backlogs and a wholesale change in culture.”
Immigration service backlogs
|
No. of cases Q3 |
No. of cases Q4 |
Difference |
% change since Q2 2012 |
| ‘Live’ asylum cohort |
28,500 |
33,500 |
5,000 |
18% |
| Asylum controlled archive |
0 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| Live immigration cases |
4,000 |
7,000 |
3,000 |
75% |
| Immigration controlled archive |
0 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| FNOs living in the community |
3,980 |
4,102 |
122 |
3% |
| FNOs – untraced |
47 |
47 |
0 |
- |
| Migration refusal pool |
181,541 |
190,615 |
9,074 |
5% |
| FLTR applications not processed within targets |
28,558 |
Unknown |
Unknown |
Unknown |
| No of cases still to be loaded on CID |
59,000 |
61,103 |
2,103 |
4% |
| FLTR on the basis of marriage or civil partnership – cases pending review |
14,000 |
14,000 |
0 |
0 |
| FLTR on basis of marriage or civil partnership – cases pending initial decision |
2,100 |
2,100 |
0 |
0 |
| Temporary and permanent migration pool |
Unknown |
190,000 |
190,000 |
Unknown |
| Total |
321,726 |
502,467 |
+180,741 |
56% |
Further information
Image: PA
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