back to article UK Scouts database 'flaws' raise concerns

Serious concerns have been raised over the security of the Scout Association's database, which holds the contact details of 450,000 young people and volunteer adults, The Register can reveal. A Scout leader contacted the Register to express grave concerns that the association's Compass database is not secure, despite the …

  1. Alister

    THINK OF THE CHILDREN!

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    UK Scout Database

    I'm Currently a scout leader and all the leaders i know are having major problems with being able to access the new compass system. we keep getting told "It will be sorted" but nothing seems to change. the system i feel is totally floored and they don't seem to care and just keep telling us it will be sorted.

    no a happy Scouter

    1. Baldie
      Facepalm

      Re: UK Scout Database

      Floored or Flawed? This worries me. As does the unpredictability of your shift key.

      no a happy parent

      I think I would be less worried about having my kids' data stored on a system where people could look up their birthdays than putting them in the charge of people with such little command of their language.

      But I do realise I am old fashioned like that.

      1. Terry 6 Silver badge

        Re: UK Scout Database

        @Baldie

        These are volunteer scout leaders. If you worry they may not be up to your standards, then volunteer yourself.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: UK Scout Database

          > These are volunteer scout leaders. If you worry they may not be up to your standards, then volunteer yourself.

          Or better yet, don't put your kids in a sect.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: UK Scout Database

        "no a happy parent"

        What does that mean?

        Does it mean that you have very little command of the English language?

        Are you in 'charge' of your kids?

        Should they be taken away from you?

        1. Kubla Cant

          Re: UK Scout Database

          "no a happy parent"

          What does that mean?

          Does it mean that you have very little command of the English language?

          "no a happy parent" is clearly an echo of "no a happy Scouter" in the original post. You should read the whole thread before replying.

      3. RegW

        Re: UK Scout Database

        Would that be: "not a happy parent" ?

        :-)

    2. Zog_but_not_the_first
      Joke

      Re: UK Scout Database

      So, no badge for the developers then?

      1. Tom 13

        Re: So, no badge for the developers then?

        Back when I was a Scout, that would be true.

        In the new improved, self-esteem building Scouts, I think you get the badge just for participating.

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      SCOUT database?

      I'd read Scouse database and couldn't make sense of the article.

  3. Christoph

    Standard response

    If (Users report serious security problems)

    {

    Say "Security is our first concern";

    Say "Our system has been properly tested and is secure";

    Do <null>;

    }

  4. djack

    Probably not allowed to do a full test

    Whoever did the testing (if any) was probably only engaged to look at the underlying Of layer and not the application itself. Or expected to test the system without being permitted to actually log in to the application.

    I am faced with this quite often and am amazed by some customers' opposition to me doing the job properly.

    1. 0laf

      Re: Probably not allowed to do a full test

      They'll have panicked at the though of proper pen testing actually costing money and or the worrying prospect it might find something which would then need to be fixed.

      Far better to get the developer to run an out of date, unlicensed copy of Nessus at it for 10min.

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Define Accessible...

    "Compass is not a publicly accessible system"

    https://compass.scouts.org.uk

    OK, so you shouldn't be able to sign up without a valid membership number, etc. but given the quality of the some of the data in the system it wouldn't surprise me in the least if some people have logins who shouldn't have...

    1. Tim Jenkins

      Re: Define Accessible...

      "...some people have logins who shouldn't have...."

      and some people are scout leaders who shouldn't be.

      (although my own unfortunate experiences were as a cadet with the St John Ambulance back in the 80s, which seemed to attract an even weirder bunch of 'leaders' than the Scouts did. Something to do with the black paramilitary uniform with silver Maltese Crosses, and the regular bandaging and CPR practice, perhaps. Yuch.)

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Define Accessible...

        > Something to do with the black paramilitary uniform with silver Maltese Crosses, and the regular bandaging and CPR practice,

        Maybe they misread the bandaging bit?

  6. A Non e-mouse Silver badge
    FAIL

    Data Protection

    "We have engaged highly regarded contractors and security experts to ensure that we comply with data protection legislation."

    "We are looking to remove the ability for our managers to see data that is not directly relevant to their role"

    Someone needs to re-read the basics of UK data protection law: ico.org.uk/for-organisations/guide-to-data-protection/data-protection-principles/ - and fire their consultants.

    Proper access control is a fundamental part of data protection and should have been baked in at the drawing board.

    1. NogginTheNog
      FAIL

      Re: Data Protection

      I expect the software will have the ability to provide full access control to whomever you wish. The failure will have been during the implementation something along the lines of this:

      Implementers - "Right, we'll need to create access control groups with suitable granular levels of access and carefully audited membership"

      Scouts people - "oh just set up the one group and bung everyone in that, that'll be ok won't it?"

  7. A Non e-mouse Silver badge
    FAIL

    CRB

    Every adult using the system will have been thoroughly vetted via a criminal records disclosure check

    1 - It hasn't been called CRB for several years. It's now DBS. (Disclosure and Barring Service) Something the Scouts should plainly know.

    2 - A clean CRB/DBS check does NOT mean the person is not a ne'er do well. All it means is that the person hasn't been noticed and recorded by the authorities yet. Ian Huntley anyone...?

    1. Terry 6 Silver badge

      Re: CRB

      Absolutely, I've never though of CRB/DBS/Whatever they will call it next as being anything but a protection for the authorities, not the kids, other than as a by product of the main purpose. Which is the usual one of the people with suits making sure that they don't get blamed for stuff that goes wrong.

      All DBS/... means is that the person hasn't been caught yet.

      It's a good idea to have background checks. But these are really no more than a minimum.

      1. Lusty

        Re: CRB

        It has nothing to do with protecting the authorities, the authorities would do just fine with or without the checks. The purpose of the checks is to allow the service (scouts, schools, whatever) to continue functioning after a bunch of morons get in the papers saying "something MUST be done!" without fully thinking through the practicality and privacy issues of actually doing something. These checks are as far as you could go without being overly invasive and costing so much as to shut down the whole system - they do, however, nicely deal with responding to those whose words would otherwise close everything down.

        The reality is that some people will always get into positions they shouldn't ideally get into. There is nothing practical that can be done to stop that aside from a weak deterrent. Our society is full of such weak deterrents - CCTV for instance, or the locks on your front door/windows at home. Neither stops the crime, they just deter the less determined from trying.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: CRB

      Every adult using the system will have been thoroughly vetted via a criminal records disclosure check

      1 - It hasn't been called CRB for several years. It's now DBS. (Disclosure and Barring Service) Something the Scouts should plainly know.

      1.1 - They never called it "CRB"? It hasn't been called "I'm a pompous pedant" for several years either. Something the Scouts should plainly know.

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: CRB

      > A clean CRB/DBS check does NOT mean the person is not a ne'er do well.

      And whether it is or not is a rubbish predictor of how good or bad they might be at working with children. I can think of a couple excellent parents and educators I know of with criminal records the size of a small library. Their experience¹ is something that children can learn from too.

      ¹ Well, some bits of their experience. Preferably not the parts about dodgy cheques or fake driving licences; although then again, you never know when that might come in handy.

    4. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: CRB

      Ian Huntley had been noticed and recorded, its just the dumb asses at a succession of Cop shops didn't bothered to a) share their concerns or b) bother to check the PNC

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Where are Capita when you need them?

    they'd sort this out

  9. Xpositor

    Scout's Motto?

    I always thought the Scouting movement's motto was "Be Prepared"?

  10. Pen-y-gors

    No shit sherlock!

    "UK Scouts database 'flaws' raise concerns - System holds records of ALL scouts in the country"

    Wow, how could that be allowed to happen? Next we'll hear that the Upper Chudleigh Campanology Society database holds records on all members of the Upper Chudleigh Campanology Society. Shameful!

    Out of interest, what would be the point of a UK Scouts database that DIDN'T hold records for all UK scouts?

    1. edge_e
      Boffin

      Re: No shit sherlock!

      Out of interest, what would be the point of a UK Scouts database that DIDN'T hold records for all UK scouts?

      You're asking the wrong question.

      The correct one is:-

      Why does there need to be a UK scout database that holds the records for all UK scouts.

      1. TallPaul

        Re: No shit sherlock!

        Quite so, that's the question that I've been asking myself. Historically groups held their own records, on paper. All headquarters required was an annual head count as they charged a capitation fee for providing their services to the groups. Seemed to work out OK for everyone.

        1. rnorman345

          Re: The way we used to do it ....

          I agree that by far the most secure way was when we used to keep records locally and only completed the census with numbers and no details; then HQ started to ask for names etc. I refused for years citing lack of security but it was inevitable as soon as OSM (OnLine Scout (and Guide) Manager) started up that the little green eyes at HQ would see their opportunity. As to testing: I am sure that the contractors hated it but we leaders were involved though I am not sure that results/suggestions, even from pros were taken into account. The testing process was flawed as was, I guess, the design. In the final analysis 'they' tried to do too much too soon; a 'start simple' system (and KISS) would have been better - say a membership system and then add the badges and then, if that works, link the two? Big smile.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: No shit sherlock!

      "System holds records of ALL scouts in the country"

      Oh, does it list the Baden-Powell Scouts, Pathfinder Scouts Association (among other independent groups) then?

      though "...records of ALL Scout Association scouts", would be a bit of a clumsy phrase

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Its horrid

    It probably was secure on the day they did the security testing - it was probably in it's usual broken state and therefore inaccessible.

    Of course they could have just arranged to come to a suitable arrangement with the system that the vast majority of Scouters use called OSM (built by scouters with a IT background for scouters) and had them add the extra functions the association wanted much like some other countries have. Instead they went and spent vast sums of time and money starting from scratch to create something that nobody I've spoken to likes.

  12. hatti

    Dib dib dib

    Whoever set up php bb did not have their sql injection or xss badges.

  13. rob_leady

    Re: Dib dib dib

    I think you meant to say DYB DYB DYB...

    1. Owain 1

      Re: Dib dib dib

      I'd been a cub assistant leader for about 8 years before I realised that 'dib dib dib' should be 'dyb dyb dyb' and it stands for 'Do Your Best'. I assume the response was 'dob dob dob'. Note, this short term isn't used any more in Scouting. At our starting ceremony the leading cub shouts out "Cubs do your Best!". Then the Cubs all shout out "We Will do our best!"

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Dib dib dib

        WDOB! then

      2. David Nash Silver badge

        Re: Dib dib dib

        "Note, this short term isn't used any more"

        And hasn't been for quite some time. I left cubs in about 1980 and we were saying the "new" version even then.

        1. Allan George Dyer

          Re: Dib dib dib

          I joined cubs in 1971, and it wasn't used then.

          I think it went out with Wolf Cubs, and the old-style salute (two fingers on each hand in a V, held to the sides of the head - wolf ears, right. I wonder why they dropped that one…)

          1. rnorman345

            Re: Dib dib dib

            DYB and DOB 1966 (APR) and all that, :-)

  14. Valerion

    Data Aquisition

    We recently got sent a form from Cubs that we had to fill in with out son's and our details on it. I presume it was to get the data into this database.

    The form itself was ridiculous. Mainly because instead of allowing space to write a Title, they had a list of titles that you had to pick from when frankly "Mr/Mrs/Ms" would have done. I have never seen such a huge list of titles, ever*

    For the record, I selected myself as a Rear Admiral and my wife as a Duchess. It will be interesting to see if we get any correspondence addressed as such.

    *And yet they missed out Sheik.

    1. Peter Simpson 1
      Happy

      Re: Data Aquisition

      Funny about title choices on forms -- we went on a cruise recently. My son paid for his own cabin, and consequently, filled out his own form. Being of a certain nature (wonder where he got that from?), and noticing that one option for title was "Captain" (and having been a Captain in the Army), he selected that. All his mails from the cruise company were addressed to "Captain..."

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Data Aquisition

        BT has Captain as a choice for your phone bill, but not any other rank.

  15. rcoombe

    "Compass is not a publicly accessible system"

    Er.. I think it is... https://compass.scouts.org.uk/login/User/Login

    Somebody probably pointing metasploit at it right now.

    1. the spectacularly refined chap

      Re: "Compass is not a publicly accessible system"

      Somebody probably pointing metasploit at it right now.

      So it isn't publicly accessible then. Entrance to our offices is protected by swipe card and/or getting past the receptionist if she buzzes you in. That's enough for us to generally consider the place not publicly accessible, the fact that anyone on the street outside can physically wander up as far as the front door does not alter that.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: "Compass is not a publicly accessible system"

        Publicly accessible in IT terms means the system can be interacted with by any member of the public. Whether the interaction requires a login to proceed further is irrelevant in this regard. The system is publicly accessible for attacking which may provide access to the secure area.

        A system that is not publicly accessible is not contactable in any way online, it is hosted on a private network behind firewalls.

        To go with your analogy, in IT terms, your building is publicly accessible because the public can walk up to it and attempt to social engineer your receptionist or exploit your door access system. Were you in a truly private building - think underground military bunker with armed guards at a gate far from the door security systems and receptionist (the firewall), then you could consider your building private.

  16. Lyndon Hills 1

    details of 450,000 young people and volunteer adults,

    Where can I volunteer to be an adult?

    1. Peter Simpson 1
      Happy

      Re: details of 450,000 young people and volunteer adults,

      Where can I volunteer to be an adult?

      Don't bother, it's no fun...better to remain a kid as long as you can :-)

      1. rnorman345

        Re: details of 450,000 young people and volunteer adults,

        One of my ex ACSLs used to say of me 'you are a 9 year old Cub that just allows a few other 9 year olds to join in your game'; I am now 71 - just led my last meeting as BSL:( going deaf and it was not fair on the others; BP was a 9 year old Cub and he lived to 84; something in this Cubbing. :-)

    2. rnorman345

      Re: details of 450,000 young people and volunteer adults,

      In Scouting? any time anywhere - we need more leaders rather like 'Be a lert' we need more lerts. :-)

  17. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Surely this system, like so many others, is just a database and a front end. It shouldn't need to be developed from scratch by idiots. There are so many well-proven packages (some of them free) that can provide this functionality out of the box, or at least with minimal configuration.

    1. Keith 21

      There is a well-proven system ALREADY used by the vast majority of Scout troops in the UK.

      Sadly, the idiots at ScoutUK HQ refuse to consider using it because of their tired old Not Invented Here mentality.

      Most scout leaders reading this will know exactly the system to which I refer!

      1. rnorman345

        The idiots?

        I think they did consider it - just could not come to terms; bet they wish they had now :)

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    A Spokesman Telling Porky Pies?

    “Every adult using the system will have been thoroughly vetted via criminal records disclosure checks”, he said.”.

    Well, that’s just an outright lie. Maybe an unintentional lie, by a misinformed spokesman, but it's not true.

    Some roles and adult appointments in The Scout Association don't require a criminal records disclosure.

    Moist notably, the role of "Group [/District / county] Administrator" doesn't have to have one.

    *Parents* are also given a “membership number”, when they are entered against their child’s information. As I understand it, the “membership number” is the unique ID used for the database.

    Provide the parent has an e-mail address entered as well, they can also access the system – albeit only to see their child’s data, and nobody elses – but they are an “adult using the system”.

    1. Dsenior

      Re: A Spokesman Telling Porky Pies?

      You can not be given a group admin role in compass unless you are a full appointed member , ie DBS / PVG done and Safe guarding modules completed

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: A Spokesman Telling Porky Pies?

        Re: A Spokesman Telling Porky Pies?

        Dsenior wrote:

        "You can not be given a group admin role in compass unless you are a full appointed member , ie DBS / PVG done and Safe guarding modules completed".

        That's not true either.

        Policy, Organisation and Rules [of The Scout Association], January 2015 edition has a table of roles and appointments that need, or do not need, a Disclosure. Group, District and County Administrators are listed as not requiring a Disclosure.

        This forum is messing about, and won't paste the link properly, so I've had to split it into two parts. Cut-and-paste-and-join these two lines to get a sensible link:

        http://members.scouts.org.uk/documents/DocumentUpload/

        Jan2015/POR_Jan_2015%20(All).pdf

        Look at page 166 onwards - there are actually a lot of appointments that don't require a disclosure.

        Indeed, if "Administrator" is their *only* appointment, and they don't have any other role that would mean they are engaging in "Regulated Activity", obtaining a Disclosure for them would be illegal.

        Now it's possible, of course, that the implementation of Compass doesn't recognise that there are some adult appointments that don't need a disclosure...

  19. Geoffrey Thomas

    Wrong data

    "I selected myself as a Rear Admiral".

    Highly suspicious- sea scout freudian slip?

  20. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    2 Years?

    To develop a system to record personal details?!!

    I'm sure there's more to it than that, but still...)

  21. Keith 21
    FAIL

    Compass has been an absolute unmitigated disaster right from the outset.

    It is cumbersome, insecure, hard to use, and should have been abandoned.

    To give you an idea - all Scout leaders are required to transfer all details of all their beavers / cubs / scouts / explorers into the Compass database before the end of this month. So far, so good.

    They can do it using a bulk upload. Sounds reasonable.

    Only, thing is, you can do ONE SINGLE bulk upload and that's all. Which is pathetic!

    What if you want to do a small test bulk upload to ensure you get everything right, then do a full bulk upload afterwards of everything?

    Tough luck, you can;t, the morons who designed the system won't let you do it.

    Some fields are marked as compulsory, even though they make no sense and don't always apply - for example, the Compass database requires full contact details of TWO parents for any member - so if you are a single parent then screw you, clearly your sort are not worthy.

    The system itself is cumbersome. To create an event, you must create the event, then you must invite yourself to the event, then you must accept that invitation, then you must approve that acceptance, and only then can you edit the event! To add attendees, one invites them, waits for them to accept, THEN one must accept their acceptance before they are actually fully accepted as attending the event.

    The system is designed and implemented by people who have no knowledge or understanding of how to actually run a scout troop.

    The Scout organisation have wasted millions of a worthless, insecure, useless system, and refuse to do anything other than continue to throw good money after bad.

    Their original plan last year was to develop Compass and do a phased rollout, such that everyone was gradually added over several months, with the database fully populated n time for this year's "census".

    Alas, as early groups were forced to use it, more and more bugs and instabilities came to light. The Scout organisation's response? To press ahead anyway, so that now the entire organisation are required to rush their members into a not-fit-for-purpose system which falls over under medium loads and doesn't actually do what is required.

    Now, the pathetic thing is that a great number of troops already use an existing perfectly good system, designed, developed and actively maintained by a ScoutMaster who knows what he is doing. It is used by a great many local UK scout troops, as well as a few international Scout organisations, and works beautifully.

    ScoutsUK, meanwhile, refuse to even consider using it.

    Why?

    "Not Invented Here".

    So instead, they continue to force their volunteers to use a system which doesn't work, which is insecure, and which causes more problems than it ever solved.

    The individual scout troop leaders? The majority put the bear minimum into Compass, and continue to use the existing excellent system for general running of their troops.

    Well done, ScoutsUK, your pathetic shortsighted approach is causing major problems for your volunteers, all because you are too arrogant and proud to admit that given the contract to your mates was not the wisest decision.

    1. AmenFromMars

      @Keith 21 I would have given you an upvote for hitting the nail on the head but "ScoutMaster", where did that come from? We've been leaders for as long as I can remember.

    2. Andy Miller

      Most of what you say is true, the bulk upload was a bloody nightmare. Kept failing, no message about why. Took me most of Christmas to nail the damn thing.

      However, one point. Two parents aren't compulsory. I thought that at the start, however I discovered the small print that says IF you enter a name for the second parent THEN all the fields for that parent become compulsory. Missing out the second parent completely is valid.

  22. NJC

    Regarding security bugs, there is no evidence to indicate that there are any bugs present. As for non-registered users gaining access; I am a Manager in Scouting and even I cannot access youth data for my County. There system undergoes routine security tests.

    1. YetAnotherLocksmith Silver badge

      "There is no evidence at all to suggest that there are any security bugs present in Compass that could grant access to data to non-registered users. We work with security experts to test the security of our systems on a regular basis to keep our data safe."

      So if *you* haven't looked, they don't exist. Good one.

      Funny, that doesn't actually work in the real world, any more than in the virtual - 'Ignore those trees, the map says that's a wood.'

    2. Statler

      Thats great. Then you can tell us the name of the pen test company then or if they are Check or Crest?

  23. fourlights
    Holmes

    ICO Anyone?

    So anyone else around here think this should be an issue for the ICO? Surely a breach on such a system would constitute contravention of the DPA?

    The guidelines are quite clear around information classification standards and governance of access to said information, whether the system is any good or not performance wise is irrelevant, granting of access to information of the highest classification can result in fines and prosecutions...

    They'll even come to you for a chat about it https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/charity/

    Just sayin'.

  24. UK Scouter

    There is no evidence at all to suggest that there are any security bugs present in Compass that could grant access to data to non-registered users. We work with security experts to test the security of our systems on a regular basis to keep our data safe.

  25. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Useless System

    I have to agree with the other leaders who are being forced into using this "system", it is not fit for purpose and totally non-intuitive.

    I have been using OSM for just over two years and it does exactly what I need it too - but along come the "management" who tell the leaders - the actual volunteers who enable the movement to exist - that they have to use more of their own time to update & maintain a sub-standard system.

    Still I guess its the management tree, those who look down see monkeys and those who lookup see arseholes!

  26. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    The Scout Association's (no)support forum for Compass, where hundreds of negative comments by increasingly frustrated and angry volunteers are being posted, has just gone private i.e. only visible to anyone in the world who wants to register on the forum site with a random username and email address.

    Security geniuses.

    http://compassuserguide.scouts.org.uk/forum

  27. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Some Questions

    * Why is a database needed at all?

    * Are its sponsors aware of the implications and potentially nefast consequences of hoarding personal data?

    * Who is legally responsible for it and answers with his own neck if any of the data is in any way misused?

    * Finally, why this unhealthy fixation with databases in the UK? Just because you can do something it doesn't mean it's a good idea.

  28. Dsenior
    Happy

    Designed by UK Gov ????

    Let's think about this

    Delivered late

    Slow, virtually unusable at some points

    cost the the earth

    traps load of info it doesn't need

    data entry deadline extended from the 30 of Jan to Mid Feb

    is just me or are there glaring similarity with the hmrc website and entering personal tax returns online a couple of years ago

  29. GS Leader

    Understanding the financial costs

    Using the number of actual members (children and leaders) as a guide I would like to work out a per head cost of this system, based on its planning, development, delivery to date and likely future costs including any over-run and extra consultant costs (made necessary by the very defensive comments of the Scout Spokesperson). At a high level can anyone reading this forum help please?

    As we are a charity we have to account to our members and also understand that we are getting value for the capitation fees we pay.

    Thank you.

  30. Qu Dawei

    How often?

    We hear many stories about such deficiencies in computer systems. What is the proportion of these out of the likely number of systems installed? Has the concept of testing adequately been thrown out of the window by too many, or is this some half-baked implementation of some perversion of Agile software development that is really a way of saving money on testing? Why are there no penalty clauses that penalize companies that get so much wrong, or don't go back to see if a prototype system was what the customer really wanted?

  31. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Compass, Be Prepared for...

    ...massive failure

    ...budget overspend on a fixed cost development project

    ...inept project management

    ...haphazard attitude towards security

  32. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    It's been pulled...

    At ease, everyone. Looks like common sense has prevailed.

    An email was sent out today to members regarding a security issue raised by a member. As a result the system has been pulled pending an investigation by a "global provider of information security that has the world's largest security testing team at their disposal". This provided has apparently not been involved with the security work to date.

    For the record, as a scout leader, I'm not a fan of the new system as it does not permit me as a volunteer to effectively manage my group in a time-efficient manner. My time as a volunteer is precious.

    This will of course cause issues for our group and Scouts as we're now unable to process disclosure checks and are unable to submit our census data, which is due.

    Anyway, I'll continue to use the other system that does work in the meantime!

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