Privacy and Cookies Notice
Wirral Council
Wirral Council is committed to protecting your privacy when you use council services. This Privacy Notice below explains how Wirral Council (as a Data Controller) collects, uses and protects personal data that we hold.
Data Controller
Wirral Council is the data controller. This means it decides how your personal data is processed and for what purposes.
Wirral Council
PO Box 290
Brighton Street
Wallasey
Wirral
CH27 9FQ
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Information about your browser, network and device
Web pages you visited prior to coming to this website
Web pages you view while on this website
Your IP address
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Information about your browser, network, or device
Your IP address
Personal data
Personal data relates to a living individual who can be identified from that data. Identification can be by the information alone or in conjunction with any other information in the data controller’s possession or likely to come into such possession.
Issues of how data is handled are dealt with by the council's Data Protection Officer Jane Corrin who can be contacted by email at DPO@wirral.gov.uk or by writing to: Data Protection Officer, PO Box 290, Brighton Street, Wallasey, Wirral CH27 9FQ.
The council is a public authority, we must comply with all relevant legislation relating to data handling.
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) is the supervisory authority in the United Kingdom established to ensure that your data rights are upheld. See Formal Resolution below for the ICO address.
Categories of personal data we hold
Obtaining, recording, holding and dealing with personal information is known as 'processing'.
We hold a variety of different categories of data depending on the relationship the council has with you. We only hold information which is necessary for the purpose the information was obtained for.
What is the legal basis for processing your personal data?
Depending on how we are processing your personal data will determine the legal basis for processing. Generally, the legal bases for processing by the council as a public authority will be:
to perform a function or provide a service required by statute (Article 6(1)(e) GDPR)
(see list of Statutory duties placed on local government)to comply with a legal obligation (Article 6(1)(c) GDPR)
where the processing is necessary for the performance of a contract to which you are a party or in order to take steps at your request prior to entering into a contract (Article 1(b) GDPR)
where disclosure is in the vital interests of yourself or another person (Article 6(1)(d) GDPR); and
with your explicit consent (Articles 6(1)(a) and 9(2)(a) GDPR)
There is a 6th Lawful basis: ‘Legitimate interests’ where the processing is necessary for data subjects legitimate interests or the legitimate interests of a third party unless there is a good reason to protect the individual’s personal data which overrides those legitimate interests. (This cannot apply to a public authority processing data to perform its official tasks.)
How we protect your data
We will take appropriate steps to make sure we hold records about you (on paper and electronically) in a secure way, and we will only make them available to those who have a right to see them. The council takes security measures such as, but not limited to:
Logical Security Control
encryption
anonymisation
pseudonymised
partitioning
Physical Security Control
managing workstations
website security
backups
network security
physical access control
monitoring network activity
hardware security
Organisational Control
monitoring committee
policies
managing Privacy risks
integrating privacy protection in projects (PIA)
People we share data with
We share data with others to enable a requested or statutory service to be provided. This could be where we use another agency to deliver the service for us or where we collaborate with other agencies.
The agencies involved may be regional partnerships, UK Government, local schools and colleges, and the National Health Service. We also provide information on occasion to the private and charity sectors where they are involved in the delivery of service for us.
Transfer of information required by law
We also share personal information where we are required to do so by law. Examples include where we are required to publish or report matters to the Government, to assist law enforcement agencies prevent, detect and prosecute crime, to protect the vital interests of the person concerned or to comply with a Court Order.
National Fraud Initiative
We participate in the Cabinet Office's National Fraud Initiative. This requires us to provide particular sets of data to the Minister for the Cabinet Office for matching. The use of data for this data matching exercise is carried out with statutory authority under part 6 of the Local Audit and Accountability Act 2014. It does not require the consent of the individuals concerned under Data Protection legislation.
Data matching by the Cabinet Office is subject to a Code of Practice.
You can view further information on the Cabinet Office's legal powers and the reasons why it matches particular information.
How long we keep your data
Data is held for no longer than is necessary and the council follows legal, financial and regulatory requirements as well as professional best practice on how long information should be kept before destruction or archiving.
The timeframe for holding data is different depending on the purpose for which the information was collected and processed.
See Wirral Corporate Retention Policy
Your data rights
1. Right to be informed
We must be completely transparent with you by providing information 'in a concise, transparent, intelligible and easily accessible form, using clear and plain language'. Our privacy notice is one of the ways we try and let you know how data is handled.
2. Right of access
You have the right to access your personal information except where:
it contains confidential information about other people and the council has to balance the rights of other individuals
includes information a care professional thinks will cause serious harm to your or someone else’s physical or mental wellbeing
information which may prejudice an investigation if disclosed
For details on how you can access your personal information see our Data Protection Policy.
3. Right to rectification
You have the right without undue delay to request the rectification or updating of inaccurate personal data.
4. Right to restrict processing
You can ask for there to be a restriction of processing such as where the accuracy of the personal data is contested. This means that we may only store the personal data and not further process it except in limited circumstances.
5. Right to object
You can object to certain types of processing such as direct marketing. The right to object also applies to other types of processing such as processing for scientific, historical research or statistical purposes (although processing may still be carried out for reasons of public interest).
6. Rights on automated decision making and profiling
The law provides safeguards for you against the risk that a potentially damaging decision is taken without human intervention. The right does not apply in certain circumstances such as where you give your explicit consent.
7. Right to data portability
Where personal data is processed on the basis of consent and by automated means, you have the right to have your personal data transmitted directly from one data controller to another where this is technically possible.
8. Right to erasure or 'right to be forgotten'
You can request the erasure of your personal data when:
i) the personal data is no longer necessary in relation to the purposes for which it was collected and processed.ii) the council’s lawful basis for processing your personal data was consent and you no longer provide your consent and there is no other legal ground for the processing , oriii) you object to the processing and there are no overriding legitimate grounds for the processing.
The Information Commissioner regulates data handling by organisations in the U.K and work to uphold the data rights of citizens and the Information Commissioner's website provides more information on the rights available to you.
Withdrawing consent
If you consented to providing your personal information to us and you have changed your mind and you no longer want the council to hold and process your information, please let us know. In the first instance please contact the relevant department. Withdrawing consent should be as easy to do as when you provided consent in the first place. If that isn't your experience with a particular service it is important you let us know of your difficulties so that we can put that right.
If you encounter any difficulties in withdrawing consent, please contact the council's Data Protection Officer by email at DPO@wirral.gov.uk or by writing to: Data Protection Officer, PO Box 290, Brighton Street, Wallasey, CH27 9FQ.
The right to complain about data handling
The council sets very high standards for the collection and appropriate use of personal data. We therefore take any complaints about data handling very seriously. We encourage you to bring to our attention where the use of data is unfair, misleading or inappropriate and we also welcome suggestions for improvement.
Informal resolution
In the first instance we would ask that you try and resolve data handling issues directly with the relevant department before applying for a formal resolution.
Formal resolution
If you are dissatisfied with the informal resolution of your complaint you can request a review by the Data Protection Officer Jane Corrin by email DPO@wirral.gov.uk
If you remain dissatisfied following an internal complaint, you can lodge a complaint with the Information Commissioner:
Information Commissioner's Office
Wycliffe House
Water Lane
Wilmslow
Cheshire
SK9 5AF
Changes to our Privacy Notice
We regularly review our privacy notice and encourage you to check it from time to time. This notice was last updated in September 2023.