Maybe I was hasty, obviously it would be lawful wouldnt it, because they are the ones who make the rules, I should have said morally illegal. They force us to give the information on threat of punishment and they are legally obliged to provide it if we ask.
Again you are working on a wrong assumption.
The GRO do not make the rules and never have.
They are governed by laws made by Members of Parliament, the same as the rest of us.
The law required them to keep the records (a task now overseen by the Identity and Passport Service).
they have the staff, offices and resources in place anyway to process all this information,its not like they had to set up just to supply us family historians. They should not be allowed to make any kind of profit from it, paying £10 for what amounts to a few surnames is not my idea of value for money and is now pricing me out of this pastime of family storyteller sadly. And they wonder why people turn to ripping and hacking, tsk!
Ive just been stung for £14 for full copies of my childrens birth certs for first passports,(new rules to suit them) after already shelling out for a few copies at birth for such reasons,which are now useless.
The price of certificates etc. is not set by the GRO either but is set by what is called a Statutory Instrument. Civil servants and number crunchers often simply use the inflation figures (as seems to have happened this time) to set the new charges.
Occasionally they check the real costs involved to provide the service , which if they did today would increase the charge to between £15 and £20 per certificate.
It should also be noted they do not make any profit but actually run at a loss (check the published accounts).
Apathy will get us nowhere, if nobody made their voice heard, then they would think they could get away with anything, maybe it will make them think twice about raising the price next year.
I can assure you I am not apathetic, in fact quite the opposite.
I am however opposed to badly researched, misguided attempts and petitions that are counter productive.
The accounts for the year 2005-2006 show that 1,640,479 certificates were issued.
Now let use assume that every person ordered four certificates that would amount to 410,119 people ordering certificates.
The current petition had when it closed 1,222 signatures.
Using these out of date figures ( present figures will be higher).
The figures therefore could be seen to show that only 1,222 customers out of 410,119 were dissatisfied with the costs.
Far from causing them to think the costs are too high the petition could actually make them think the public would accept a far higher increase before even 10% complain about the increase.
Cheers
Guy