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GDPR

Statement of intent

Cardinal Heenan Catholic High School recognises that GDPR compliance is not about a specific date but a commitment to an ongoing process of ensuring that we attain compliance and introduce procedures to safeguard that compliance.

Cardinal Heenan Catholic High School, in line with the requirements of GDPR, has appointed a Data Protection Officer who is not part of the school, Chris Walsh, Liverpool City Council.  The Data Protection Officer will take responsibility for data protection compliance and has the knowledge, support and authority to carry out this role effectively.

The GDPR is a piece of EU-wide legislation which will determine how people’s personal data is processed and kept safe, as the legal rights individuals have in relation to their own data.

‘Personal data’ means information that can identify a living individual.

Main principles

The GDPR sets out the key principles that all personal data must be processed in line with.

  • Data must be: processed lawfully, fairly and transparently; collected for specific, explicit and legitimate purposes; limited to what is necessary for the purposes for which it is processed; accurate and kept up to date; held securely; only retained for as long as is necessary for the reasons it was collected

There are also stronger rights for individuals regarding their own data.

  • The individual’s rights include: to be informed about how their data is used, to have access to their data, to rectify incorrect information, to have their data erased, to restrict how their data is used, to move their data from one organisation to another, and to object to their data being used at all
Requirements

The GDPR is similar to the Data Protection Act (DPA) 2018 (which schools already comply with), but strengthens many of the DPA’s principles. The main changes are:

  • Schools must appoint a data protection officer, who will advise on compliance with the GDPR and other relevant data protection law
  • Privacy notices must be in clear and plain language and include some extra information – the school’s ‘legal basis’ for processing, the individual’s rights in relation to their own data
  • Schools will only have a month to comply with subject access requests, and in most cases can’t charge
  • Where the school needs an individual’s consent to process data, this consent must be freely given, specific, informed and unambiguous
  • There are new, special protections for children’s data
  • The Information Commissioner’s Office must be notified within 72 hours of a data breach
  • Organisations will have to demonstrate how they comply with the new law
  • Schools will need to carry out a data protection impact assessment when considering using data in new ways, or implementing new technology to monitor pupils

If you have any GDPR queries please email gdpr@cardinal-heenan.org.uk

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