When I looked at past CC actions, I didn’t get the impression that they were in the habit of blowing things out of proportion. But of course I didn’t have the full facts of each investigation.
One reason I don’t put much stock in the CC may not “necessarily [be a] trustworthy or fair arbiter” possibility is that it has to act with reasoning transparency because it is accountable to a public process. Its actions with substance (as opposed to issuing warnings) are reviewable in the UK courts, in proceedings where the charity—a party with the right knowledge and incentives—can call them out on dubious findings. The CC may not fear litigation in the same sense that a private entity might, but an agency’s budget/resources don’t generally go up because it is sued and agencies tend not to seek to create extra work for themselves for the thrill of it.
Moreover, the rationale of non-disclosure due to CC concerns operates at the margin. There are particular things we shouldn’t disclose in public because the CC might badly misinterpret those statements is one thing. There is nothing else useful we can disclose because all of those statements pose an unacceptable risk of the CC badly misinterpreting any further detail is another.
When I looked at past CC actions, I didn’t get the impression that they were in the habit of blowing things out of proportion. But of course I didn’t have the full facts of each investigation.
One reason I don’t put much stock in the CC may not “necessarily [be a] trustworthy or fair arbiter” possibility is that it has to act with reasoning transparency because it is accountable to a public process. Its actions with substance (as opposed to issuing warnings) are reviewable in the UK courts, in proceedings where the charity—a party with the right knowledge and incentives—can call them out on dubious findings. The CC may not fear litigation in the same sense that a private entity might, but an agency’s budget/resources don’t generally go up because it is sued and agencies tend not to seek to create extra work for themselves for the thrill of it.
Moreover, the rationale of non-disclosure due to CC concerns operates at the margin. There are particular things we shouldn’t disclose in public because the CC might badly misinterpret those statements is one thing. There is nothing else useful we can disclose because all of those statements pose an unacceptable risk of the CC badly misinterpreting any further detail is another.