Why is there a delay in Police Checks?

Why is there a delay in Police Checks?

The National Police Checking Service (NPCS) is currently experiencing an unprecedented use of the system, and due to a number of factors outside of their control there may be significant delays in processing of checks.

Police checking in Australia is a partially manual, name-based process, involving many stakeholders. The NPCS aims to return checks as quickly as possible, however turnaround times are not guaranteed.

There are many reasons as to why some checks take longer than others to process, including:

  • the check subject having a common name, or a name that matches with many potential Persons of Interest on policing systems
  • the check subject having old police information that requires manual collection and processing of hard copy records
  • the relevant police agency having inaccurate or incomplete records which need to be investigated properly before the check can be finalised
  • transferring information between the various state and territory police agencies before the information can be vetted and/or released
  • workloads within each police agency.

The NPCS facilitates over 5 million checks each year, which may result in over 7000 referrals to police each day. Resourcing constraints within all affected agency, will also likely impact upon the ability to turn around these check results more quickly, particularly during peak periods.

The NPCS completes around 70% of police checks within minutes, providing a result back to the submitting agency. The remaining 30% of checks are referred to one or more police agencies for manual processing. When responding to concerns about timeframes, the NPCS team escalates concerns to the relevant police jurisdiction, however as there is no definitive amount of time it takes to process a police check  it is always advisable to allow as much time as possible.

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