PRIVACY NOTICE ROLE HOLDERS (Churchwardens, DCC Secretaries, DCC Treasurers, Deanery Synod reps, Safeguarding officers etc)
Your personal data – what is it?
“Personal data” is any information
about a living individual which allows them to be identified from that data
(for example a name, photographs, videos, email address, or address).
Identification can be by the information alone or in conjunction with any other
information. The processing of personal
data is governed by [the Data Protection
Bill/Act 2017 the General Data Protection Regulation 2016/679 (the “GDPR” and
other legislation relating to personal data and rights such as the Human Rights
Act 1998].
Who are we?
This Privacy Notice is provided to
you by the District Church Council (DCC) of All Saints, Whitstable, which is
the data controller for your data.
The Church of England is made up of
a number of different organisations and office-holders who work together to
deliver the Church’s mission in each community. The DCC works together with:
·
The
PCC, the incumbent of the parish (that is, our team vicar and team rector);
·
The
bishops of the Diocese of Canterbury; and
·
The Diocesan Offices (including the
offices of the Archdeacons), which are responsible for the financial and
administrative arrangements for the Diocese of Canterbury.
As the Church is made up of all
these persons and organisations working together, we may need to share personal
data we hold with them so that they can carry out their responsibilities to the
Church and our community. The
organisations referred to above are joint data controllers. This means we are
all responsible to you for how we process your data.
Each of the data controllers has their
own tasks within the Church and a description of what data is processed and for
what purpose is set out in this Privacy Notice. This Privacy Notice is given to
you by the DCC on our own behalf and on behalf of each of these data
controllers. In the rest of this Privacy Notice, we use the word “we” to refer
to each data controller, as appropriate.
How do we process your personal data?
The data controllers will comply
with their legal obligations to keep personal data up to date; to store and
destroy it securely; to not collect or retain excessive amounts of data; to
keep personal data secure, and to protect personal data from loss, misuse,
unauthorised access and disclosure and to ensure that appropriate technical
measures are in place to protect personal data.
We use your personal data for some
or all the following purposes as necessary (for example, some role-holders are
volunteers and it may not be necessary to process financial information for
these role holders):
·
To enable those who
undertake pastoral care duties as appropriate (e.g. visiting the bereaved);
·
To enable us to meet all
legal and statutory obligations (which include maintaining and publishing our
electoral roll in accordance with the Church Representation Rules);
·
To carry out comprehensive
safeguarding procedures (including due diligence and complaints handling) in
accordance with best safeguarding practice from time to time with the aim of
ensuring that all children and adults-at-risk are provided with safe
environments;
·
To deliver the Church’s
mission to our community, and to carry out any other voluntary or charitable
activities for the benefit of the public as provided for in the constitution
and statutory framework of each data controller;
·
To administer the parish, deanery,
archdeaconry and diocesan membership records;
·
To fundraise and promote the
interests of the church and charity;
·
To manage our employees and
volunteers;
·
To maintain our own accounts
and records;
·
To seek your views or
comments;
·
To notify you of changes to
our services, events and role holders
·
To send you communications
which you have requested and that may be of interest to you. These may include
information about campaigns, appeals, other fundraising activities;
·
To process a grant or
application for a role;
·
To enable us to provide a
voluntary service for the benefit of the public in a particular geographical
area as specified in our constitution;
·
To share your contact
details with the Diocesan Offices so they can keep you informed about news in
the diocese and events, activities and services that will be occurring in the
diocese and in which you may be interested.
·
We will process data about
role holders for legal, personnel, administrative and management purposes and
to enable us to meet our legal obligations, for example to pay role-holders,
monitor their performance and to confer benefits in connection with your
engagement as a Role Holder. “Role Holders” includes volunteers, employees,
contractors, agents, staff, retirees, temporary employees, beneficiaries,
workers, treasurers and other role holders.
·
We may process sensitive
personal data relating to Role Holders including, as appropriate:
§ information about a Role Holder's physical or
mental health or condition in order to monitor sick leave and take decisions as
to the Role Holder's fitness for work;
§ the Role Holder's racial or ethnic origin or
religious or similar information to monitor compliance with equal opportunities
legislation;
§ to comply with legal requirements and
obligations to third parties.
·
Our processing also includes
the use of CCTV systems for the prevention and prosecution of crime.
What data do the data
controllers listed above process?
·
Names, titles, and aliases, photographs.
·
Contact details such as
telephone numbers, addresses, and email addresses.
·
Where they are relevant to
our mission, or where you provide them to us, we may process demographic
information such as gender, age, date of birth, marital status, nationality,
education/work histories, academic/professional qualifications, employment
details, hobbies, family composition, and dependants.
·
Non-financial identifiers
such as passport numbers, driving license numbers, vehicle registration
numbers, taxpayer identification numbers, employee identification numbers, tax
reference codes, and national insurance numbers.
·
Financial identifiers such
as bank account numbers, payment card numbers, payment/transaction identifiers,
policy numbers, and claim numbers.
·
Financial information such
as salary, bonus, record of earnings, tax code, tax and benefits contributions,
expenses claimed, creditworthiness, car allowance (if applicable), amounts
insured, and amounts claimed.
·
Other operational personal
data created, obtained, or otherwise processed in the course of carrying out
our activities, including but not limited to, CCTV footage, recordings of
telephone conversations, IP addresses and website visit histories, logs of
visitors, and logs of accidents, injuries and insurance claims.
·
Other employee data (not
covered above) relating to Role Holders including emergency contact information; gender, birth
date, referral source (e.g. agency, employee referral); level, performance
management information, languages and proficiency; licences/certificates,
citizenship, immigration status; employment status, retirement date; billing
rates, office location, practice and speciality; publication and awards for
articles, books etc.; prior job history, employment references and personal
biographies.
·
The data we process is
likely to constitute sensitive personal data because, as a church, the fact
that we process your data at all may be suggestive of your religious beliefs.
Where you provide this information, we may also process other categories of
sensitive personal data: racial or ethnic origin, sex life, mental and physical
health, details of injuries, medication/treatment received, political beliefs,
labour union affiliation, genetic data, biometric data, data concerning sexual
orientation and criminal records, fines and other similar judicial records.
What is the legal basis for processing your personal data?
Most of our data is processed
because it is necessary for our legitimate interests, or the legitimate
interests of a third party (such as another organisation in the Church of
England). An example of this would be
our safeguarding work to protect children and adults at risk. We will always consider your interests, rights
and freedoms.
Some of our processing is necessary
for compliance with a legal obligation. For example, we are required by the
Church Representation Rules to administer and publish the electoral roll, and
under Canon Law to announce forthcoming weddings by means of the publication of
banns.
We may also process data if it is
necessary for the performance of a contract with you, or to take steps to enter
into a contract. An example of this would be processing your data in connection
with the hire of church facilities.
We will also process your data to assist you in
fulfilling your role in the church including pastoral and administrative
support or if processing is necessary for compliance with a legal obligation.
Religious organisations are also
permitted to process information about your religious beliefs to administer
membership or contact details.
Where your information is used other
than in accordance with one of these legal bases, we will first obtain your consent
to that use.
Sharing your personal data
Your personal data will be treated
as strictly confidential. It will only be shared with third parties including
other data controllers where it is necessary for the performance of the data
controllers’ tasks or where you first give us your prior consent. It is likely
that we will need to share your data with
·
The
appropriate bodies of the Church of England including the other data
controllers;
·
Our
agents, servants and contractors. For example, we may ask a commercial provider
to send out newsletters on our behalf, or to maintain our database software;
·
Other
clergy or lay persons nominated or licensed by the bishops of the Diocese of Canterbury
to support the mission of the Church in our parish. For example, our clergy are
supported by our area dean, lay chair and archdeacon, who may provide
confidential mentoring and pastoral support. Assistant or temporary ministers,
including curates, deacons, licensed lay ministers, commissioned lay ministers
or persons with Bishop’s Permissions may participate in our mission in support
of our regular clergy;
·
Other
persons or organisations operating within the Diocese of Canterbury including
but not limited to, where relevant, the Canterbury Diocesan Enterprises Ltd and
Aquila (the Diocese of Canterbury Academies Trust).
How long do we keep your personal data?
We will keep some records permanently if we are
legally required to do so. We may keep
some other records for an extended period of time. For example, it is current
best practice to keep financial records for a minimum period of 7 years to
support HMRC audits. In general, we will endeavour to keep data only for as
long as we need it. This means that we may delete it when it is no longer
needed.
Your rights and your personal data
You have the following rights with
respect to your personal data: -
When exercising any of the rights
listed below, to process your request, we may need to verify your identity for
your security. In such cases we will need you to respond with proof of your
identity before you can exercise these rights.
1.
The right to access
information we hold on you
·
At any point you can contact
us to request the information we hold on you as well as why we have that
information, who has access to the information and where we obtained the
information from. Once we have received your request we will respond within one
month.
·
There are no fees or charges
for the first request but additional requests for the same data may be subject
to an administrative fee.
2.
The right to correct and
update the information we hold on you
·
If the data we hold on you
is out of date, incomplete or incorrect, you can inform us and your data will
be updated.
3.
The right to have your
information erased
·
If you feel that we should
no longer be using your data or that we are illegally using your data, you can
request that we erase the data we hold.
·
When we receive your request,
we will confirm whether the data has been deleted or the reason why it cannot
be deleted (for example because we need it for our legitimate interests or
regulatory purpose(s)).
4.
The right to object to
processing of your data
·
You have the right to
request that we stop processing your data. Upon receiving the request, we will
contact you and let you know if we are able to comply or if we have legitimate
grounds to continue to process your data.
Even after you exercise your right to object, we may continue to hold
your data to comply with your other rights or to bring or defend legal claims.
5.
The right to data
portability
·
You have the right to
request that we transfer some of your data to another controller. We will
comply with your request, where it is feasible to do so, within one month of
receiving your request.
6.
The right to withdraw your
consent to the processing at any time for any processing of data to which
consent was sought.
·
You can withdraw your
consent easily by telephone, email, or by post (see Contact Details below).
7.
The right to object to the
processing of personal data where applicable.
8.
The
right to lodge a complaint with the Information
Commissioner’s Office.
Transfer of Data Abroad
Any electronic personal data
transferred to countries or territories outside the EU will only be placed on
systems complying with measures giving equivalent protection of personal rights
either through international agreements or contracts approved by the European
Union. Our website is also accessible from overseas so on occasion some
personal data (for example in a newsletter) may be accessed from overseas.
Further processing
If we wish to use your personal data
for a new purpose, not covered by this Data Protection Notice, then we will
provide you with a new notice explaining this new use prior to commencing the
processing and setting out the relevant purposes and processing conditions.
Where and whenever necessary, we will seek your prior consent to the new
processing.
Changes to this notice
We keep this Privacy Notice under
regular review and we will place a copy and any updates on http://www.allsaintswhitstable.com/
This Notice was last updated in May 2018.
Contact Details
Please contact us if you have any questions about this
Privacy Notice or the information we hold about you or to exercise all relevant
rights, queries or complaints at:
The Data Controller, Malcolm Waller
Email: Malcolm.waller@outlook.com
Tel, 01227 275947 (Church Office)
You can contact the Information Commissioners
Office on 0303 123 1113, via email or at the Information Commissioner's Office, Wycliffe House, Water Lane, Wilmslow,
Cheshire SK9 5AF.
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