Data Protection Policy

EXECUTIVE STATEMENT
At City of Armagh High School (the “School”), we believe privacy is important. We are
committed to complying with our data protection obligations and to being concise, clear and
transparent about how we obtain and use Personal Information and how (and when) we delete
that information once it is no longer required.
We will review and update this data protection policy (the “Policy”) regularly in accordance
with our data protection obligations.
Any queries in relation to this Policy or any of the matters referred to in it should be submitted
to the Principal Mr Douglas
The following policies, procedures and documents are also relevant to this Policy:
 Data Breach Management Procedure
 Subject Access Request Procedure
 Department of Education Document Disposal Schedule
 Positive Behaviour Policy
 Personal Devices Policy
 Internet Policy
DATA PROTECTION POLICY
1. Scope
1.1. The School is subject to the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) which
imposes obligations on the School as a data controller in relation to the protection,
use, retention and disposal of Personal Information. This Policy sets out the
procedures that are to be followed when dealing with Personal Information and
applies to all Personal Information processed by or on behalf of City of Armagh High
School
1.2. You must read this Policy because it gives important information about:
1.2.1. the data protection principles with which City of Armagh High School must
comply;
1.2.2. what is meant by Personal Information and Special Category Data;
1.2.3. how we gather, use and (ultimately) delete Personal Information and Special
Category Data in accordance with the data protection principles;
1.2.4. where more detailed Privacy Information can be found, e.g. about the
Personal Information we gather and use about you, how it is used, stored and
transferred, for what purposes, the steps taken to keep that information secure
and for how long it is kept;
1.2.5. your rights and obligations in relation to data protection; and
1.2.6. the consequences of our failure to comply with this Policy.
1.3. Please refer to the School’s privacy notices www.cityofarmagh.org and, where
appropriate, to other relevant policies including in relation to Positive Behaviour
Policy, Personal Devices Policy and Internet Policy, which contain further information
regarding the protection of Personal Information in those contexts.
2. Data Protection Principles
2.1. GDPR sets out the following principles with which any party handling Personal
Information must comply. All Personal Information must be:
2.1.1. processed lawfully, fairy and in a transparent manner;
2.1.2. collected for specified, explicit and legitimate purposes only, and will not be
further processed in a manner that is incompatible with those purposes;
further processing for archiving purposes in the public interest, scientific or
historical research purposes or statistical purposes shall not be considered to
be incompatible with the initial purposes;
2.1.3. adequate, relevant and limited to what is necessary in relation to the purposes
for which it is processed;
2.1.4. accurate and, where necessary, kept up to date and take reasonable steps to
ensure that inaccurate Personal Information are deleted or corrected without
delay;
2.1.5. kept in a form which permits identification of individuals for no longer than is
necessary for the purposes for which the information is processed; Personal
Information may be stored for longer periods insofar as the data will be
processed solely for archiving purposes in the public interest, scientific or
historical research purposes subject to implementation of the appropriate
technical and organisational measures required by GDPR in order to
safeguard the rights and freedoms of the individual; and
2.1.6. processed in a manner than ensures appropriate security of the Personal
Information, including protection against unauthorised or unlawfulprocessing
and against accidental loss, destruction or damage, using appropriate
technical or organisational measures.
3. Lawful, Fair and Transparent Processing
3.1. The School will, before any processing of Personal Information starts for the first time,
and then regularly while it continues:
3.1.1. process the Personal Information on at least one of the following bases:
3.1.1.1. Consent:
 the individual has given their express agreement to the
processing of their Personal Information for one or more
specific purposes;
 parental consent will be obtained for any child aged under
13 years old or for children aged over 13 who are not
considered capable of giving consent themselves.
3.1.1.2. Contractual:
 the processing is necessary for the performance of a
contract to which the individual is party or in order to take
steps at the request of the individual prior to entering into
a contract;
3.1.1.3. Legal Obligation:
 the processing is necessary for compliance with a legal
obligation to which the School is subject;
3.1.1.4. Vital Interests:
 the processing is necessary for the protection of the vital
interests of the individual or another natural person; or
3.1.1.5. Public Interest:
 the processing is necessary for the performance of a task
carried out in the public interest or exercise of official
authority; or
3.1.1.6. Legitimate Interests:
 the processing is necessary for the purposes of legitimate
interests of the School or a third party, except where those
interests are overridden by the interests of fundamental
rights and freedoms of the individual, in particular where
the individual is a child.
3.1.2. except where the processing is based on consent, satisfy ourselves that the
processing is necessary for the purpose of the relevant lawful basis (i.e. that
there is no other reasonable way to achieve that purpose);
3.1.3. document our decision as to which lawful basis applies to help demonstrate
our compliance with the data protection principles;
3.1.4. include information about both the purposes of the processing and the lawful
basis for it in our relevant privacy notices www.cityofarmagh.org
3.1.5. where Special Category Data is processed, identify a lawful special condition
for processing that information and document it; and
3.1.6. where criminal offence information is processed, identify a lawful condition for
processing that information and document it.
4. Rights of the Individual
4.1. The GDPR states that individuals have the following rights in respect of the
processing of their Personal Information:
4.1.1. The right to be informed:
4.1.1.1. The School will keep individuals informed of its processing
activities through its privacy notices www.cityofarmagh.org
4.1.2. The right of access:
4.1.2.1. An individual may make a subject access request (“SAR”) at any
time to find out more about the Personal Information which the
School holds on them. All SARs must be forwarded to the Principal
info@armaghhigh.armagh.ni.sch.uk
4.1.2.2. The School is required to respond to a SAR within one month of
receipt but this can be extended by up to two months in the case
of complex and/or numerous requests and, in such cases, the
individual will be informed of the need for such extension. The
School does not charge a fee for the handling of a straightforward
SAR.
4.1.3. The right to rectification:
4.1.3.1. If an individual informs the School that Personal Information held
by the School is inaccurate or incomplete, the individual can
request that it is rectified.
4.1.4. The right to erasure:
4.1.4.1. An individual is entitled to request that the School ceases to hold
Personal Information it holds about them.
4.1.4.2. The School is required to comply with a request for erasure unless
the School has reasonable grounds to refuse.
4.1.5. The right to restrict processing:
4.1.5.1. An individual is entitled to request that the School stops
processing the Personal Information it holds about them in certain
circumstances.
4.1.6. The right to data portability:
4.1.6.1. An individual has the right to receive a copy of their Personal
Information and use it for other purposes.
4.1.7. The right to object:
4.1.7.1. An individual is entitled to object to the School’s processing of their
Personal Information.
4.1.8. Rights in relation to automated decision making and profiling:
4.1.8.1. An individual has the right to challenge any decision that is made
about them on an automated basis (subject to certain exceptions).
4.1.8.2. The School is also required to comply with certain conditions if it
uses Personal Information for profiling purposes.
5. Data Protection Officer
5.1. A Data Protection Officer (DPO) is appointed who will monitor adherence to this
policy.
5.2. The DPO is required to have an appropriate level of knowledge.
6. Privacy by Design
6.1. The School has adopted the principle of privacy by design and will ensure that the
definition and planning of all new or significantly changed systems that collect or
process Personal Information will be subject to due consideration of privacy issues,
including the completion of one or more data protection impact assessments.
6.2. The data protection impact assessment will include:
6.2.1. Consideration of how Personal Information will be processed and for what
purposes;
6.2.2. Assessment of whether the proposed processing of Personal Information is
both necessary and proportionate to the purpose(s);
6.2.3. Assessment of the risks to individuals in processing the Personal Information;
6.3. What controls are necessary to address the identified risks and demonstrate
compliance with legislation.
6.4. A data protection impact assessment is conducted by the Principal:
6.4.1. On every business process periodically, at least once a year and more
frequently where the amount and/or sensitivity of Personal Information
processed, dictates so;
6.4.2. As part of the project calendar admission requirements checklist;
6.4.3. At every high-impact change, and/or at the request of the Data Protection
Officer.
7. Data Retention & Disposal
7.1. The longer that Personal Information is retained, the higher the likelihood is accidental
disclosure, loss, theft and/or information growing stale.
7.2. Any Personal Information kept by the School is managed in accordance with the
Department of Education Disposal of Records Schedule (https://www.educationni.gov.uk/publications/disposal-records-schedule).
8. Data Breach
8.1. A data breach is any (potential) unintended loss of control over or loss of Personal
Information within the School’s environment. Preventing a data breach is the
responsibility of all the School staff and its workforce.
8.2. Please refer to the School’s Data Breach Management Procedure.
9. Third-Party Services and Subcontracting
9.1. The School may decide to contract with a third party for the collection, storage or
processing of data, including Personal Information;
 GL Assessment
 Capita
9.2. If the School decides to appoint a third party for the processing of Personal Information,
this must be regulated in a written agreement in which the rights and duties of the
School and of the subcontractor are specified. A subcontractor shall be selected that
will guarantee the technological and organisational security measures required in this
Policy, and provide sufficient guarantees with respect to the protection of the personal
rights and the exercise of those rights.
9.3. The subcontractor is contractually obligated to process Personal Information only
within the scope of the contract and the directions issued by the School.
10. Complaints
10.1. Complaints will be dealt with in line with the School’s complaints policy which is
available upon request from the school secretary.
10.2. You have the right to make a complaint at any time to the Information Commissioner's
Office (ICO), the UK supervisory authority for data protection issues. The ICO’s
details are as follows:
The Information Commissioner’s Office – Northern Ireland
3rd Floor
14 Cromac Place,
Belfast
BT7 2JB
Telephone: 028 9027 8757 / 0303 123 1114
Email: ni@ico.org.uk
11. Definitions
“consent” is any freely given, specific and transparently, wellinformed indication of the will of the individual,
whereby the individual agrees that his or her
Personal Information may be processed.
Particular requirements about consent can arise
from the respective national laws.
"Personal Information" (sometimes known as “personal data”) means any
information relating to an identified or identifiable
natural person. An identifiable person is one who
can be identified, directly or indirectly — in
particular, by reference to an identification number
or to one or more factors specific to his or her
physical, physiological, mental, economic, cultural
or social identity.
“processing” means obtaining, recording, organising, storing,
amending, retrieving, disclosing and/or destroying
information, or using or doing anything with
Personal Information.
"Special Category Data" (sometimes known as “sensitive personal data”)
means Personal Information that reveals racial or
ethnic origin, political opinions, religious or
philosophical beliefs, trade union membership,
genetic and biometric data and the processing of
data concerning health or sex life