A hypothetical question, but one to which you must already know the hypothetical answer: did BASC not 'work with' the HO to bring in to operation rules which mean that if I refuse to pay some GP or other to review my notes, I wouldn't get my certificates?
It is indeed an interesting ethical question, whether it would be unprincipled or hypocritical of me to pay up given my stance.
I'm no moral philosopher - so I'll just leave that question with the observation that as an employee of BASC, I'm not sure you're in a good position to ask it.
How to 'sort out' the 'crisis'? A few thoughts...
1. Our organisations must stop believing that the Police and the HO are their friends. They are cleverer and more slippery than you seem to imagine, and they don't like lawfully-held firearms.
2. In that context, don't feel flattered when they ask you for help. They only want your help to make things worse for us, so it's time to start disappointing them rather than (as currently) your members.
3. Point out that the fee an applicant pays on application or renewal of certificates is a statutory one, and in the interests of fair application of the law applicants should not have to pay additional fees of any kind. That is the way it has been hitherto, and with good reason.
4. Point out that
if it is cost-effective and useful for public safety for
every applicants' GP records to be reviewed, then that process should be taken in hand by the FLDs.
5. The FLDs locally or nationally should negotiate what they consider a fair price with the GPs and pay it. If a GP refuses, the FLD could send the GP notes to MedCert (or similar). We already give the FLD permission to ask the GP for this information, I think.
6. Medical chicanery aside, it sounds to me as though the 'crisis' is based largely on FLDs being understaffed - the remedy for which would seem to be a combination of reducing unnecessary work ('territorial restriction'-related land visits, servicing the discretionary conditions industry etc.) and giving them money for more staff.
7. It is not the responsibility of users of the FLD service to stump up to fund chronically the under-resourced and unnecessarily-overworked departments. These department exist for the safety of the public: not, as most of us are only too aware, for the convenience of lawful users of firearms.