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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Ali & Anor R (on the application of) v Minister for the Cabinet Office the Statistics Board [2012] EWHC 1943 (Admin) (13 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/1943.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1943 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN BIRMINGHAM
33 Bull Street, Birmingham, B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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The Queen on the application of: Mohammed Ali SJ |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Minister for the Cabinet Office The Statistics Board |
Defendants |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ramby de Mello, Abid Mahmood and Tony Muman (instructed by Fountain Solicitors) for the Second Claimant
George Peretz (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 21 and 22 June 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Beatson :
I. Introduction
II. The claimants
III. The evidence
IV. The Article 8 submissions summarised
V. The submissions on Directive 95/46
VI. The position and the practice of the Board
"The UK Statistics Authority's policy, and ONS practice, has been and remains that:
(i) it will never volunteer to disclose personal information for any non-statistical purpose;
(ii) if disclosure is sought, the Board will always refuse to allow it where it would be lawful to refuse. The Board will contest any legal challenge to its decision in this regard to the maximum extent possible under the law to ensure statistical confidentiality. The Board will do so in an open, public and transparent manner, to the extent permitted under the law; and
(iii) those seeking disclosure will be directed to non-statistical administrative sources as viable alternatives to statistical information.
Respecting confidential personal information is a fundamental tenet of the Authority and ONS."
"(a) A successful application was made to Leeds Crown Court by the Police for a disclosure order under paragraph 4 of Schedule 1 to the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 requiring the disclosure of the census form from the 1961 census for a particular address. That application was made without notice being given to the Board and the effect of that order was stayed, with the consent of the Police, and without any information being disclosed by the Board after the Police agreed that the application should have been made on notice and that alternative sources of information not held by the ONS were available to meet their needs.
(b) A successful application was made to Snaresbrook Crown Court by a defendant in criminal proceedings, under section 2 of the Criminal Procedure (Attendance of Witnesses) Act 1965, for a summons requiring the National Statistician to produce the Census form for a particular address from 1981. The National Statistician refused the application for the summons. However, when the summons was made it allowed the National Statistician to redact from the form for production any information collected on the Census form for that address that related to persons other than the defendant in the particular criminal proceedings or their relatives. Since the information recorded in the form did not relate to those persons, no personal information was disclosed and the Census form was not disclosed.
(c) The Family Division of the High Court made an order for disclosure of a Census record for a particular address in the context of family proceedings. In that case the order for disclosure was stayed without any disclosure being given after we agreed with the applicant that there were other sources of more relevant information for them to pursue." (statement, paragraph 22)
"6.1.4
A privacy concern of some members of the public may be that external suppliers do not treat their personal data with the same confidentiality and rigour as ONS applies, or may not be subject to the same protections and controls as are applied to ONS. Some may also be concerned that their data will be used by such companies for purposes other than the census (e.g. direct marketing purposes).
6.1.5
To manage this concern, ONS has put in place both contractual and operational measures to ensure that the same privacy standards that ONS would adopt are applied by the companies with whom we work. …
6.1.7
…
(a) Staff working on the census, whether ONS employees or contractors, are subject to the ONS' confidentiality legislation. Also census staff, both ONS employees and contractors, must sign a census confidentiality undertaking confirming that they have read and understood these confidentiality requirements and the potential penalties for not complying with them. In addition, awareness training on confidentiality and privacy of census personal information is included in the training of staff that will, or might, handle census information.
…
6.3.3
ONS is aware of privacy concerns expressed about the possibility of the US Patriot Act being used by US intelligence services to gain access to personal census records for England and Wales. These concerns have been addressed by a number of additional contractual and operational safeguards. These arrangements have been put in place to ensure that US authorities are unable to access census data:
- Existing law already prevents the disclosure of census data…
- All census data is owned by ONS and all of the legal undertakings of confidentiality of personal census information will apply to both ONS and any contractor.
…
- The day-to-day running of operational services will be provided by the consortium of specialist service providers. All of these specialist sub-contractors are registered and owned in the UK or elsewhere in the EU.
- This contractual structure means that no US companies will have any access to any personal census data.
- No Lockheed Martin staff (from either the US parent or UK company) will have access to any personal census data.
- All staff that have access to the full census data set in the operational data centre work for ONS.
6.3.4
In addition to the above, a wide range of physical and operational security measures will be put in place, including:
- Staff with access to the full census data set or substantial parts of it will have security to handle material classified as "secret" under the UK government's classifications.
- ONS staff will authorise all physical and system accesses to census personal information.
…
- All census employees and contractors working on the census sign a declaration of confidentiality to guarantee their undertaking and compliance with the law.
- All data will be processed in the UK – the data capture centre and census helpline will be located in the UK.
…
6.4.5
In order to mitigate public concerns in relation to the potential handling of their information … ONS has maintained the position that the entire field force will be employees of ONS and subject to the same Civil Service privacy obligations.
6.4.6
However, the major field force privacy issues probably relate to maintaining the privacy of the personal details of the large temporary field force employed for the census. This is being managed through adherence to the Data Protection Act by both ONS and Capita, but also strict provisions within the contract specification for data security, encryption, and independent testing."
VII. The Data Protection Act 1998
i) "explicit consent" by the data subject (paragraph 1); the necessity of the processing for the exercise or performance of any legal right or obligation on the data controller in connection with employment (paragraph 2);
ii) necessity "in order to protect the vital interests of the data subject or another person" in a case where consent cannot be given by or on behalf of the data subject or the data controller cannot reasonably be expected to obtain the consent of the data subject (paragraph 3);
iii) the information has been made public as a result of steps deliberately taken by the data subject (paragraph 5);
iv) the processing is necessary for the purpose of or in connection with any legal proceedings, obtaining legal advice, or is otherwise for the purposes of establishing, exercising or defending legal rights (paragraph 6);
v) the processing is necessary for the administration of justice (paragraph 7(1)(a)); and
vi) the processing is necessary for the exercise of functions of either House of Parliament, or any function conferred on any person by or under an enactment or the exercise of any functions of the Crown, a Minister, or a government department (paragraph 7(1)(aa) – (c)).
VIII. Conclusion on Article 8
IX. Conclusion on Directive 95/46
Note 1 In a devolved administration, the authorisation must be by the relevant Chief Statistician. [Back] Note 2 One commentator, Hickman, has described the DPA 1998 as “one of the most poorly drafted pieces of legislation on the statute book”: see http://ukconstitutionallaw.org/2012/03/10/tom-hickman-data-over-protection/
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