Aycliffe Today Business Aycliffe Today Business issue 32 | Page 25
The magazine for Aycliffe Business Park | 25
GDPR……
time is running out!
Leading corporate law firm Endeavour Partnership
explains more about the data protection shake-up...
What is GDPR?
The General Data Protection Regulation
(GDPR) is a major shakeup in data protection
laws across the EU.
It will officially come into force on May
25, and will automatically apply to the UK.
GDPR’s reach is global and any company that
processes data, be it customer or employee
data, to anyone in the EU, will be required to
comply.
Since the introduction of the Data
Protection Act 1998, there’s been a revolution
in data and how it shapes our everyday
lives. Whilst in 1998 much of our personal
information was stored in filing cabinets
under lock and key, smart phones, tablets
and other handheld devices have drastically
changed the way we process personal data
which includes names, addresses and an
individuals’ basic details and sensitive data,
like information about racial origins and
sexual orientation.
What’s changing?
The core principles of the data protection
regime remain broadly the same. However,
there are a number of important changes
and new obligations to be aware of. More
importantly, the penalties for getting it wrong
are much more severe. The maximum fine
for a breach of the GDPR will be 4 per cent
of turnover or 20 million euros, whichever
is the higher. Sanctions also include audits,
warnings and temporary and permanent
bans, all issued by the Information
Commissioners Office (ICO). There is also
a new requirement to report serious or
major breaches to the ICO and also the data
subject.
If you are a business based outside the
EU, but you send information to member
states of the EU, you may be required to
appoint a representative based in the EU
who is responsible for data protection.
If you process data on a large scale,
employ 250 staff or more, or are a public
sector organisation, you will need to appoint
a data protection officer, a position which
has statutory protection in law, who will be
responsible for overseeing your company’s
compliance with the GDPR.
GDPR also strengthens the level of
consent required to justify using personal
data. For example a pre-ticked box or
silence /inactivity will not be valid consent
to for example, the Company sending
our marketing material to a data subject.
Consent must be freely given and specific
with a genuine choice involved., which the
Company is responsible for obtaining.
WHAT DOES MY
BUSINESS NEED TO DO?
The good news is that for most
businesses and other organisations there
is still (just) enough time to do something
about the GDPR and make sure that you
will be ‘GDPR ready’ before 25th May
2018.
However, there is not a moment to lose
as it will take a typical SME up to three
months to become ‘GDPR ready’.
If you have not already taken steps to
make sure that you are GDPR compliant,
you will need to immediately:
• appoint someone to take
responsibility for GDPR compliance;
• appoint an external advisor such as
Endeavour Partnership to support
that person (unless he/she is GDPR
competent);
• arrange for a data audit to be carried
out to document your data practices;
• verify that your use of data will
continue to be lawful by establishing
a GDPR compliant basis for your data
processing; and
• develop policies and procedures in
order to ensure that you operate in
a way that is GDPR compliant, and
continue to do so post May 2018.
Endeavour Partnership has a specialist GDPR team, headed by Martin McKinnell. For further information about how Endeavour
Partnership can help you to become GDPR ready, contact ([email protected]), Jessica Maine ([email protected]) or
Laura Kirkpatrick ([email protected]).