Schools
Teaching Regulation Agency to Destroy Records of Baseless Misconduct Probes Earlier
Published June 25, 2026
The Teaching Regulation Agency (TRA) is set to implement new data retention policies that will see records of baseless teacher misconduct investigations destroyed sooner than previously required. The change addresses growing concerns about the long-term impact of unsubstantiated allegations on educators' careers, ensuring that individuals cleared of serious professional misconduct are not permanently burdened by records of investigations that found no evidence of wrongdoing.
Under the revised arrangements, details of probes that do not result in a prohibition order or finding of serious misconduct will be removed from TRA systems after a significantly reduced timeframe. This represents a deliberate shift in regulatory approach, balancing the imperative to maintain thorough safeguarding records for genuine child protection concerns against the professional rights of teachers to have baseless complaints expunged from their employment history.
For local authorities and school leaders, this policy change necessitates a careful review of internal record-keeping practices and data-sharing protocols with the TRA. Whilst the accelerated destruction of unsubstantiated allegation records aims to protect the teaching workforce from wrongful reputational damage, councils must ensure their own safeguarding arrangements remain robust, with clear distinctions maintained between investigations that prove baseless and those that identify genuine risks to children.
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